Featuring twenty-two chapters written by a multidisciplinary group of international experts, Human Politics and Practice, Second Edition, is designed for politics students. Offering unparalleled breadth and depth of coverage, it takes students beyond a purely legal perspective with discussions of core theoretical approaches and detailed studies of major issues.
The first seven chapters introduce the main theoretical issues and challenges in the study of human rights as a political phenomenon. The following fifteen thematic chapters offer detailed analysis and case studies of such key issues as economic globalization, genocide, the environment, and humanitarian intervention. The book is enhanced by pedagogical features and in-depth, concrete examples. A Companion Website provides web links and a flashcard glossary for students and a test bank and PowerPoint-based lecture slides for instructors.
This book can be distilled into three main points: 1. Human rights is universal. 2. Human rights is not universal. 3. Human rights should be culturally relevant. I personally think that human rights often exist merely as an ideal at the international level, with implementation that is heavily biased—benefiting some while neglecting others. This book left me with more questions rather than answers but as my professor said; good questions are worth more than answers because they make you think more deeply and see more clearly.