Also, the way it treats the travails of R2P, the ICC etc as a synecdoche for the human rights movement at large, and concludes that general re-entrenchment is required, is frustrating. Why should e.g. disability rights activists pull back, just because the ICC is in rocky waters?https://twitter.com/colmocinneide/status/986760929038790658 …
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En réponse à @colmocinneide
I think it comes back to the focus of Bridging the Divide (& the report I shared with you last week) - global human rights often feels like an abstraction, dislocated from the real world; disability rights is - like civil rights movements -much more rooted in everyday struggle...
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En réponse à @neilmcrowther @colmocinneide
Populists on the left and right seem better able to make appeals to these struggles than international human rights NGOs, because the former focus on people, where the latter focus on human rights as 'an object' (as
@anatosaurus points out) & assume support for it to be a given.1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
En réponse à @neilmcrowther @colmocinneide
Or, perhaps, the solution lies in verbalizing the divide and its origins. See new research on talking about race and class:https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/14/democrats-race-class-divide-2018-midterms …
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En réponse à @anatosaurus @colmocinneide
In case of interest/use https://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/sites/laws/files/btd-report.pdf … now thinking about follow up including analysis of politics, culture & language surrounding equalities & human rights
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thank you!
Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
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