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September 1999
344 pp.
(PAPER)
Trade

ISBN-10:
1-890951-00-5
ISBN-13:
978-1-890951-00-9

Out Of Print
Other Editions
Cloth (1999)
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Table of Contents
From Zone Books:
Human Rights in Political Transitions
Gettysburg to Bosnia
Edited by Carla Hesse and Robert Post

This book brings together prominent scholars and political activists to assess the evolution of the international human rights agenda since the end of the Cold War. It argues for a major reorientation of the objectives and strategies of the human rights community in light of the emergence of renewed and often virulent forms of political tyranny and civil conflict.

For many years, the primary objective of human rights proponents has been to ensure the adoption, monitoring, and enforcement of international agreements. Our ability to enforce such agreements, however, presupposes cultures in which law is a basic element of the social order. Today the world must deal with extreme cases of human rights abuse—in places like Rwanda, Bosnia, Haiti, and Cambodia—that involve societies undergoing dramatic political transitions. In these countries violent conflict can be ended only by the establishment of new democratic regimes and the rule of law. In the post-Cold War era it has become increasingly clear that full protection of human rights depends upon the creation of such regimes. Organized around the themes of punishment, reconciliation, and law, the essays argue that the scope of human rights activism must expand beyond human rights agreements to active assistance for transitional societies in the reconstitution of civic and political order.




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