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Home > Resources > Other Publications > Human Rights Dialogue (1994-2005) > Series 2, No. 3 (Summer 2000): Silence Breaking: The Women's Dimension of the Human Rights Box |
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Series 2, No. 3 (Summer 2000): Silence Breaking: The Women's Dimension of the Human Rights Box
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DOWNLOAD FOR FREE (LINK AT BOTTOM OF PAGE), OR PURCHASE PRINT COPY.
The Beijing Platform for Action emerged from the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995. The Beijing +5 meeting, held in New York in summer 2000, assessed the implementation of the Platform in critical areas of concern, including human rights. The Human Rights Initiative contributes to this agenda by focusing on women’s rights. Specifically, what can human rights language and concepts achieve for women and girls at the local level? Is the human rights movement responding to local needs? Are those struggling for gender equity at the local level embracing a human rights framework? If so, why, when, and under what conditions is it successful from their perspective? Local women’s rights advocates from around the world discuss how to mediate between universal rights and conflicting cultural principles towards advancing women’s causes.
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Introduction: Silence Breaking: The Women's Dimension of the Human Rights Box
- 08/06/00
Lack of resources, lack of political will, and entrenched systems of patriarchy challenge the human rights movement’s ability to protect the rights of women.
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Basic Christian Communities: Reaching Women in Brazil’s Popular Sectors
- 08/06/00
The Basic Christian Communities (CEBs) provide a space for discussion of patriarchy and other social justice concerns. They have helped women to reflect upon their own understandings of themselves and to bond in common cause, inspiring them to make human rights ideals a reality.
Author(s):
Lúcia Ribeiro
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Women’s Rights in the Context of Insurgency: A Report from Northeast India
- 08/06/00
India’s Northeast is under a near-constant state of emergency, with tensions
frequently erupting between locals and the Indian security forces. L. Anna Pinto examines role and contribution women's rights can have in this hostile region.
Author(s):
L. Anna Pinto
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The Hope of Human Rights in Combating Welfare "Reform"
- 08/06/00
Because the majority of Americans have not accepted the international human rights framework, the most effective course of action is to work with low-income families and seize opportunities for media exposure and public forums to counter harmful and discriminatory misperceptions.
Author(s):
Sandra Chapin
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Fifteen Years after the World Charter for Prostitutes’ Rights
- 08/06/00
The fight for sex workers’ rights is a difficult one because few NGOs and human rights organizations understand the nature of sex work or are prepared to support the participation of sex workers in arenas where their rights are decided.
Author(s):
Penelope Saunders
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Ending Female Genital Mutilation without Human Rights: Two Approaches-Sierra Leone
- 08/06/00
It is more effective to avoid the cultural and religious rationales of FGM and instead concentrate on the associated health risks, thus creating a more comfortable atmosphere in which to discuss this highly charged issue.
Author(s):
Melron Nicol-Wilson
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Ending Female Genital Mutilation without Human Rights: Two Approaches-Egypt
- 08/06/00
FGM can be dismantled by persistent questioning. An appeal informed by an understanding of human rights, but which draws upon local cultural and religious notions of common sense, justice, and dignity is often the best way to change the cultural norms that violate them.
Author(s):
Nadia Wassef
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The "Capabilities" Advantage to Promoting Women’s Human Rights
- 08/06/00
Nussbaum's "capabilities approach" clearly articulates the motivating concerns and ultimate goals of social justice, and provides a benchmark with which to measure what it means to secure certain rights.
Author(s):
Martha Nussbaum
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Reflections of a Global Women’s Activist
- 08/06/00
The focus of criminal justice systems on “finding the bad guy,” without a comprehensive analysis of what perpetuates abuses, often renders women as “victims.” Creating the economic, social, and political conditions that lead to the securing of rights is as important as finding the violators and seeking redress.
Author(s):
Susan Bazilli
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Download: Download for Free (PDF, 171.78 K)
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Human Rights Dialogue promotes a global discussion of
human rights ideas and practices by presenting firsthand
accounts of human rights issues as they arise within specific
real-life contexts. In so doing, it helps to clarify the significant and ongoing evolution that is taking
place within the human rights movement to make the
human rights framework more relevant and effective in
addressing the social, economic, and political challenges
of the twenty-first century.
The entire publication is online, or you may purchase individual print
copies.
Series One (1993–1998)examines all sides of the Asian values debate—the argument that Asian
cultural values imply different human rights standards
and priorities from those in the West.
Series Two(2000–2005)addresses the problem of the
“human rights box”—the constraints that have enabled
the human rights framework to gain currency among
elites while limiting its advance among the most vulnerable.
Specifically, the essays aim to locate the barriers to
greater public legitimacy of human rights and to demonstrate
how those barriers can be overcome.
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