Human rights in the twentieth century
Human rights in history
Human rights in history.
Introduction: genealogies of human rights / The Emergence of Human Rights Regimes: gt1. The end of civilization and the rise of human rights: the mid-twentieth century disjuncture / The 'human rights revolution' at work: displaced persons in post-war Europe / 'Legal diplomacy': law, politics, and the genesis of postwar European human rights / Postwar Universalism and Legal Theory: Personalism, community, and the origins of human rights / René; Cassin: Les droit de l'homme and the universality of human rights, 1945-1966 / Rudolf Laun and the human rights of Germans in occupied and early West Germany / Human Rights, State Socialism, and Dissent: Embracing and contesting: the Soviet Union and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948-1958 / Soviet rights-talk in the post-Stalin era / Charter 77 and the Roma: human rights and dissent in socialist Czechoslovakia / Genocide, Humanitarianism, and the Limits of Law: Toward world law? Human rights and the failure of the legalist paradigm of war / 'Source of embarrassment': human rights, state of emergency, and the wars of decolonization / The United Nations, humanitarianism, and human rights: war crimes/genocide trials for Pakistani soldiers in Bangladesh, 1971-1974 / Human Rights, Sovereignty, and the Global Condition: African nationalists and human rights, 1940s-1970s / The International Labour Organization and the globalization of rights, 1944-1970 / 'Under a magnifying glass': the international human rights campaign against Chile in the seventies
Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig, editor.
Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann -- Mark Mazower; G. Daniel Cohen; Mikael Rask Madsen -- Samuel Moyn; Glenda Sluga; Lora Wildenthal -- Jennifer Amos; Benjamin Nathans; Celia Donert -- Devin O. Pendas; Fabian Klose; A. Dirk Moses -- Andreas Eckert; Daniel Roger Maul; Jan Eckel.
edited by Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann.