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LAWS 2105 B - Social Justice & Human Rights

Social Justice & Human Rights

Sept 19th - The Political Language of Human Rights

  • Generalized language/usage of “man” in Declarations to refer to everyone (in modern times)
  • Colonial Language used while on colonized land → used to oppress people indigenous to Canada
  • History is always a project of the present (i.e. it always is a product of social and political context)
    • Be critical of what points are made
    • Projection of perspective onto social and political contexts
  • Human rights require 3 interlocking qualities
    • Natural (inherent in human rights)
    • Equal (the same for everyone)
    • Universal (applicable everywhere)
  • Natural rights were easier to except than equality and universality due to social and political context
  • European Enlightenment (1650-1800)
    • Before this time it was called the “dark ages”
    • Foreground reasoning, science, law to reason and support understandings or thought (science and reason)
      • This included both technological advances and the rational organization of society
      • Scientific progress (like Galileo’s theories on a heliocentric universe) led to people being worried about the implications it would have on the public’s morals
      • Romanticizing the past due to the progress made by industrialization
    • Individualism (and individual moral autonomy)
      • How is political and moral authority organized?
      • Who had access to the work of God?
      • The church and royalty had the most power because of the access to information/knowledge.
      • Moral power over those who were not literate or positions of privilege
      • When the word of God (the Bible) became more widespread there was a rise in literacy which allowed people to begin to question the traditional basis of religious or royal authority
    • European expansion and colonialism
      • Empire building as a european
      • The start of the modern “world system” in the 15th century
        • International economy, trades routes, capitalism in colonies
      • By the 18th century, a new class of “merchants” were starting to gain political power
        • Going abroad to other countries/continents to take precious resources and sell them in areas where it is harder to acquire
        • Making immense wealth and begin to challenge the monarchy
        • Change in political empire
        • Larger distribution of inequality, change in class systems
        • Moving away from an absolute monarchy, merchants and others acquiring wealth demanding to have their voices heard
  • Changes in the foundation of Law and Authority
    • If not religion, is it society?
    • How is it organized? How should it be?
    • Central problem in social and political thought: Changing understandings of what IS rethinking what OUGHT to be
    • Philosophers criticize/comment on current political/social changes
    • Hobbes talked about Social Contract Theory
      • If people are more than just subjects, what are they? And how should they relate to each other?
      • People join together to give up some of their freedom to a sovereign authority (an entity with the right to make and enforce rules)
      • This is beneficial because it brings humans out of a “state of nature”
      • Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan (1651)
    • Jean-Jacques Rousseau: a different type of social contract
      • “Discourse on Inequality” (1755)
        • Broader statement on society
        • Things go wrong the moment people start gathering more than they need (i.e. society corrupts)
        • The “noble savage” myth → we strip away of society we go back to being at peace and with nature → infantilizes non-europeans
        • Reason and progress are not necessarily good without moral cultivation
      • The Social Contract (1762)
        • About citizenship, how to be a good citizen, being engaged in politics and the community
        • The road to freedom is through politics
        • Foundations of good decisions is people engaging their will in a civilized way
        • We are better off combining to form a collectivity to make decisions for ourselves
        • This is far better than the traditional sources of authority
  • The Rise of the Modern State
    • Morality backed by religion which then supports political movements
    • Depicted in popular media and art to promote a message
  • The American Revolution
    • Political context of the American and French revolutions: the modern state as a product of challenges to traditional authority based on these themes
      • Who has the right to rule?
    • Hunt (in chapter. 3): there were two types of rights discussed in the 1760s and 1770s
      • Particular rights of (British) citizens
      • Universal rights of “free men”
        • Deserving of universal rights based on their status (wealthy, white men who were property owners)
      • Colonists facing taxation issues, not as autonomous as they wish, Boston tea party
    • The limitations of the first led to the embrace of the ideas of Universal rights
      • Note the list of grievances against the King of England in the Declaration of Independence
    • New Legal Scholarship on Natural Rights
      • Protestants related to religion and what defines man
      • Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui: “The idea of Right, and even more that of natural law, are manifestly related to man’s nature. It is therefore from this nature itself of man, from his constitution, and from his condition that we must deduce the principles of this science” (Hunt 2007, pg 120)
      • Rights thus reflected the IS and the OUGHT of 18th century American politics
      • Hunt talks about this in terms of the “problem of self-evidence”
      • What is our nature? What are we owed as “men”?
    • The Paradox of Slavery
      • Jefferson had a slave taking care of him when he wrote that all men are created equal
      • The 1619 Project: The 1619 Project is a long-form journalism endeavor developed by Nikole Hannah-Jones, writers from The New York Times, and The New York Times Magazine focused on subjects of slavery and the founding of the United States.
      • The language of universal rights may have been a practical strategy, but it also opened a door to political action
      • Once you start to pick up the language and concepts of human rights you can come to other conclusions that contradict other/older concepts
    • Return to Particular Rights
      • US Constitution signed in 1791
      • This included the Bill of Rights (first 10 amendments of the Constitution)
      • These rights applied specifically to US citizens (and their relationship to the new US government)
  • The French Revolution

Causes of the French Revolution

  • Inspired by the Americans and their revolution
  • Economic: Financial crisis and increasing poverty
  • Social: Growth of the industrial middle class
  • Intellectual: New ideas about political autonomy
  • Political: Out of touch Monarchy that responded to crisis with force
  • Hunt: Additional Factors
    • Rise of literacy allowed social/political messages to be told through media like literature which caused large groups of people to have:
      • Emotion and Empathy: Julie ou la Nouvelle Héloïse
      • Distaste for Torture: Voltaire: The Calas Affair
        • The preparatory question: torture to get answers about company/details of the crime
  • Human Rights as a reflection of social changes
    • Practical concerns about the power of the State
      • American Rev.: Federal v.s. State government
      • French Rev.: Fear of royal backlash
    • Rationalization of public affairs
      • Status and honour v.s. Transparent rules as a basis for law (Max Weber)
    • More focus on individual lives
      • Epistolary novels, access to the everyday experiences of others
    • The struggle for rights was limited by the paradoxes of oppressions
      • Yet resistance to this oppression helped carry forward these rights
  • The Paradox of Colonialism
    • Points out the rise of the bourgeoisie in France was boosted by the slave trade
    • Toussaint L’Ouverture lead the slave revolt in 1791 that was partly inspired by the principles of the French Revolution
    • France (Louis Bonaparte) tried to re-establish slavery but was eventually defeated
    • In many ways, the Haitian revolution pushed the principles of the French Revolution further than France

September 26th - Human Rights and Humanitarianism

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October 3rd - Human Rights, Justice and Social Groups

  • Three Overlapping History
    • Human Rights
      • Principle: protection from state violence
      • Practice: writing/amending legal documents
    • Humanitarianism
      • Principle: West as savior (civilisation → security)
      • Practice: professionalization of international aid
    • Social Justice
      • Principle: liberal values aren’t experienced equally
      • Practice: protesting and advocating for change
  • The Roots of (Western) Social Justice
    • Society is the root of injustice
    • Justice is found through the direct expression of the “general will”
      • I.e. through moral reasoning, we can figure out justice for ourselves – no need for priests or kings tell us
      • Rousseau’s pamphlet on “A Discourse on inequality”
        • Very liberal in his thinking but not in practice
        • Didn’t think highly of women despite speaking so intensely on universal human rights
    • Wollstonecraft: How could Rousseau be so right about moral reasoning, but unable to extend his ideas to women?
      • Who is the “we” in a political community?
  • Karl Marx: Injustice and Capitalism
    • 1840s-1870s
    • Discussion on class exploitation and unequal distribution of wealth and labour
    • Historical Background of Marx’s Thought:
      • Germany was in a political flux as the Holy Roman Empire transitioned to a unified state
      • There was an open struggle to define the future → revolution felt inevitable
      • Especially as the industrial revolution was changing Germany & Europe (1830s & 40s)
      • These changes were altering the social and political → new social “classes” were emerging as important political players
    • Marx’s Political Engagements
      • Argued the French Revolution was a “bourgeois revolution” and that human rights were “bourgeois rights” and applied to a very small group of people
      • Marx learned from workers’ struggles for political recognition
      • Also learned the power of these ideas when he was forced to leave Germany, and then France (settled in England)
      • His early writing dealt with the plight of workers in capitalist society
      • Theorized historical progress driven by the injustices of capitalism (e.g. The Communist Manifesto)
    • Marx’s Theory of Exploitation
      • Labour is the only thing that can add value to an exchange
      • Yet labourers are rarely compensated based on the amount of value they produce
        • Small wages and bourgeois taking the majority of the amassed wealth and then buying colonial lands to increase their wealth in other ways nd repeating the cycle
      • Despite the expansion of formal rights, and the growth of the industrial economy, the living conditions of labourers deteriorated during the industrial revolution
  • Labour Movement as a Social Justice Movement
    • 8 hour day movement → Haymarket Affair: On May 4, 1886, a bomb detonated near Haymarket Square in Chicago after police arrived to break up a rally in support of striking workers. This protest is one of a number of strikes, demonstrations, and other events held by workers and their supporters in Chicago from May 1-4 to advocate for an eight hour workday.
      • Galvanized labour and incentivized more employers to have 8 hour work days
    • The Winnipeg General Strike: labour action about metal and factory workers fighting against inhumane working conditions do to the exploitation of growing numbers of people in need of work
      • Influx of immigrants
      • After WW1
      • General Strike: union and non union members don’t work in order to protest bad working conditions
    • Limitations of the North American Labour Movement
      • Problem: unions are good for workers, but what if they exclude some workers in favour of others?
        • Often anti-immigrant
        • Only occasionally focused women’s labour
          • E.g. the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
      • Racist undercurrent
        • Jim Crow and the Great Migration
        • W.E.B. Du Bois’ study of Philadelphia
    • Progress Era Movements for Social Justice
      • Suffrage movements: Women’s right to vote
      • Prohibition Movement: making alcohol illegal and ending liquor trafficking
        • Seen as one of the first feminist movements
        • (Remember still included anti-immigrant sentiments)
    • Great Depression and the New Deal
      • The New Deal:
        • Series of social welfare policies
        • Assistance programs for employment, housing, old age security, etc..
        • Foundation for post-WW2 reconstruction of Europe and the rise of the Welfare state
      • The Post-War Welfare State
        • US economy emerged from WW2 in good shape
        • 1950s saw the rise of a middle class (aided by government assistance)
        • This economic success was not shared equally (mainly racism)
    • The Rise of “New Social Movements”
      • Primarily associated with the 1960s (but with roots in the 1950s)
      • Social Justice isn’t just about class and labour rights
        • Civil Rights Movement
        • Feminist Movement
        • American Indian Movement
        • Gay/Queer Liberation Movement
        • Peace Movement
      • Addressed multiple forms of oppression
    • Young: A New Definition of Justice
      • Traditional theories of justice are distributive
      • Justice is also about individual and collective capacities
      • Injustice often takes the form of disabling constraints (e.g. oppression)
        • Young: Oppression and Social Structure: “...oppression also refers to systematic constraints on groups that are not necessarily the result of the intentions of a tyrant. Oppression in this sense is structural, rather than the result of a few people’s choices or policies. Its causes are embedded in unquestioned norms, habits, and symbols, in the assumptions underlying institutional rules and the collective consequences of following those rules” (pg. 41)
      • What is a Social Group?
        • “A social group is defined not primarily by a set of shared attributes, but by a sense of identity” (pg. 44)
        • Why is it problematic to ground a theory of justice in individual experience?
        • Are human rights primarily focused on individuals or groups?
      • Five faces of oppression
        • Exploitation
        • Marginalization
        • Powerlessness
        • Cultural Imperialism
        • Violence

October 10th - Settler Colonialism and Indigenous Rights

  • On power and historical narratives
    • Western Human Rights: innovative legal framework, or limited political paradox?
    • Western Humanism: universal moral philosophy, or justification for imperialism?
    • Western Social Justice Movements: democratic freedom in action, or proof that much injustice still exists?
      • Important to the modern day (labour movement and the 8 hour work day) but very exclusionary at the time
      • Next section: modern expressions of power and the institutionalization of injustice
        • Institutionalization: the process by which particular ideas, norms, and behaviours turn into the formal rules for how to do things.
  • On History and Justice
    • How do you address injustice that has become institutionalized? (e.g. the displacement and mistreatment of indigenous peoples)
    • How does the history of colonial rule shape indigenous experiences in Canada?
    • Example: recent reports suggest that the mortar on Parliament Hill came from the Algonquin burial ground across the river.
  • What is Settler Colonialism?
    • “Settler colonialism” is a term used to distinguish phenomenon that are related to, but distinct from the experience of colonial empires
      • Historically, colonial empires exploited native populations (e.g. for labour and goods like the case of the British empire and India)
      • Settlers often worked to expel, assimilate or otherwise “remove” traces of the native population
    • A new area of study and a language for justice
      • Temporally indeterminate: “Settler invasion is a structure and not an event” (Veracini, 2011, in the journal Settler Colonial Studies)
      • Colonialism reproduces itself; Settler Colonialism extinguishes itself
        • Settler colonialism separates itself from the act of colonization and instead becomes the norm
    • Responding to Settler Colonialism
      • The experiences and responses to settler colonialism are different than other postcolonial situations
      • Decolonizing does not mean “putting the past behind us” (that is partly the goal of settler colonialism)
      • Why might the language of decolonizing be useful or important? (e.g. nation to nation relationships)
      • Settler Colonial Studies as a rethinking and retelling of history
  • Aboriginal Rights in Modern Canada
    • From the Constitution Act of 1982:
      • 35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.
      • (2) In this Act, “aboriginal peoples of Canada” includes the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada
      • (3) For greater certainty, in subsection (1) “treaty rights” includes rights that now exist by way of land claims agreements or may be so acquired.
      • (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the aboriginal and treaty rights referred to in subsection (1) are guaranteed equally to male and female persons.
    • SCC Interpretations of Aboriginal Rights
      • R v. Sparrow (1990) – found that there is an aboriginal right to hunt and fish. The Fisheries Act doesn’t supersede s. 35(1).
      • R. v. Van der Peet (1996) – “To be an aboriginal right an activity must be an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture of the aboriginal group claiming the right”
      • R. v. Powley (2003) – Aboriginal rights can have modern iterations AND extend to Métis people. Also introduced the “Powley test”.
    • Effects of the SCC approach to rights
      • The case of Mi’kmaq lobster fishing and settler violence:
        • See this summary of the story from BBC News
        • Fishing rights were guaranteed by the Peace and Friendship Treaty of 1752.
        • These rights were largely ignored until the supreme court of canada affirmed them
        • Government of Canada has looked to the SCC, while the Court tends to introduce ambiguous language
          • In this case, the definition of a “moderate livelihood”
        • This legal ambiguity creates space for violence (e.g. the RCMP can stand back and wait for order while a lobster pound burns)
        • This can be read as part of a cycle whereby the “rights” of indigenous peoples are affirmed and then violated by the State
          • Which raises the question of whether a rights framework makes sense without a focus on social justice
  • UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    • Adopted by UN General Assembly in 2007
      • Settler Colonial countries voted against (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, United States)
    • Rights to self-determination, autonomy, and self-government
    • Right to Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC)
    • Right to not be subjected to forced assimilation
    • Asserts that States should provide mechanisms to prevent or redress actions of depriving indigenous people of their cultural identities
  • UNDRIP and Canada
    • Canadian economy built around extractive industries, which poses a problem for Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC)
    • Canadian state worried about the so-called “Indian Veto”
    • Legal Concepts RElated to FPIC (Patzer 2019)
      • Fiduciary Duty: Established in Guerin v. The Queen in 1984. Subsequently rolled back as “overshooting” Crown responsibility
      • Justifiable Infringement: R v. Sparrow established Aboriginal rights, but also outline the possibility that these rights could be infringed upon
        • Delgamuukw v. British Columbia (1997) defined Aboriginal Title and suggested that Federal OR Provincial governments could justifiably infringe on it to develop “Agriculture, forestry, mining, and hydro-electric power”
      • Duty to Consult: The SCC, however, has created a legal obligation for the Crown to engage a meaningful process of consultation if it wants to infringe Aboriginal rights or title
        • This is as far as the SCC has gone on FPIC
  • Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission
    • Product of the 2006 Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA)
    • Established in 2008 and published its report in 2015
    • Aimed to provide a history of the residential school system as well as the first-hand experiences of residential schools (truth)
    • Also aimed to build a path towards reconciliation between the Canadian gov’t and indigenous peoples
    • Proposed 94 “Calls to Action” to redress the historical harm caused by residential schools and colonial dispossession
  • Truth Commissions and Transitional Justice
    • Truth (and Reconciliation) Commissions became popular in the 1980s among “new” democracies (e.g. focused on “disappeared persons” in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile)
    • Following dictatorships, they aimed to move a nation out of a cycle of violence
    • South African TRC is a prominent example of the politics of TRCs
      • Included provisions for Amnesty
      • Didn’t address the inequality created by the Apartheid system (no reparations)
  • Expanding the Frame of Justice
    • Patzer (2014) talks about the “therapeutic ethos” as a depoliticized frame for reconciliation. What does this mean?
    • Why might the Canadian TRC represent a limited form of justice?

October 17th – The Holocaust as the Defining Crisis of Western Modernity

  • A Brief History of the Holocaust
    • US Holocaust Memorial Museum Film (graphic content warning)
    • How to teach events like the Holocaust?
      • Genocides are not inevitable
      • They have complex histories and causes
      • Don’t compare tragedies
      • Humanize the people involved (victims, perpetrators, collaborators)
      • Don’t exploit emotional responses to the subject
        • E.g. Godwin’s law
  • Social and Political Conditions of Facis, in Germany
    • Financial crisis
    • Populist anger against elites
    • Appeals to Nationalism (Treaty of Versailles)
    • Expansion of pseudo-scientific claims about race
    • Critiques of democracy, parliamentarianism and liberal pluralism
      • E.g. Carl Schmitt: all politics is based on the distinction between friend and enemy
  • Effects of Industrialization and Urbanization
    • Berlin was very multicultural city at the end of the 19th century
    • As a growing industrial urban centre, Berlin challenged social norms and values
    • Modernism: an artistic and cultural movement that embraced the experiences and values of industrial life
      • E.g. Bauhaus architecture
    • This led to resentment, and movements embraced various types of “returning” to better times
    • Nazi interest in neo-classical architecture is an example
  • Cultural Conditions of Pre-War Germany (and the narratives of Anti-Semitism)
    • Simmel on “Metropolis and Mental Life” (1903): people in the city must adopt a “blasé attitude”
    • Simmel on “the Stranger”: “The man who comes today and stays tomorrow… [t]he stranger is an element of the group itself” (1908)
    • Jewish communities in Europe embodied the stranger as a social type: close in proximity, but socially remote
    • Historically, a difficult group for the Christian church to make sense of (related but not the same)
  • Modernism and Technological Utopianism
  • Modernism and the Dark Side of Technology
  • Walter Benjamin on Progress and History
    • A Klee painting named ‘Angelus Novus’ shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing in from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such a violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress. (Walter Benjamin, 1940)
  • Catastrophic Logic of Technology
  • Law and the Holocaust
    • Questions raised by the Holocaust
      • How could a “civilized” country (built on Western “rule-of-law”) carry out such a horrible program?
      • Is justice possible here?
      • How can we prevent genocide in the future?
      • How should we treat people who have been stripped of their rights?
  • The Aftermath of the Holocaust
    • Nuremberg Trials 1945-1948
      • International Military Tribunal
      • First trial - 22 Defendants (only German)
      • Charges:
        • Crimes against peace
        • Conspiracy to wage aggressive war
        • War crimes
        • Crimes against humanity
      • Crimes against humanity as a “new” offense
        • Was this retroactive justice?
      • Legal due process or “victors’ justice”?
  • Difficult Questions of the Nuremberg Trials
    • Can there be an internationally recognized legal framework?
    • The conventions and treaties cited in this trial mostly dealt with war crimes (Hague Conventions 1899 & 1907; 3rd Geneva Convention 1929)
      • What about the treatment of civilians?
    • Awkwardness of violations by Allied powers (Stalin’s crimes against humanity, US’s atom bombs)
    • Four Allied powers had to work together to agree on a framework for the trial
    • This framework laid the groundwork for later UN conventions
      • Important discursive shift from “civilization” to “humanity”
  • Legacy of Nuremberg
    • Trials also covered legal, economic and medical issues
    • Nuremberg Principles: Principles that were the underlying justification of the trials (e.g. the “superior orders” defense is not acceptable)
      • Problem for international law: what if disobeying orders puts one in danger?
    • Nuremberg Code: Research ethics guidelines resulting from the Doctors trials
    • The IG Farben Trial: introduced rules around profiteering and corporate responsibility for crimes against humanity
  • Hannah Arendt: Learning from the Holocaust
    • Like many scholars, worked to make sense of the Holocaust
    • Arendt fled Germany in 1933, Paris in 1940. Arrived in New York in 1941
    • Politics is about responsibility and action
    • Germans abdicated their political responsibility and failed to act
  • The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (1961)
    • Eichmann was captured in Argentina and extradited to Israel
    • Eichmann trial: a political exercise?
    • Arendt: “Justice… demands seclusion, it permits sorrow rather than anger, and it prescribes the most careful abstention from all the nice pleasures of putting oneself in the limelight” (pg. 6)
    • The Eichmann trial, on the other hand, was set up as if it were a play complete with a stage and an audience
  • Narratives that Arendt Dismisses
    • Nazis as evil super-villains
      • This gives figures like Eichmann more credit than they deserve
    • Nazi government as ultra organized and efficient
      • There was constant administrative jockeying an unclear communication of rules and laws
    • Nazi administration as “ruthless and tough”
      • Example of some Western European countries pushing back against final solution measures
  • Modernity and the Holocaust
    • The Holocaust was a social tragedy grounded in the logics of modern society
    • In this sense, it’s not just “something that happened to Jewish people” but a product of European “civilization”
    • The difference being the rationalization and scale of the tragedy (spontaneous violence of pogroms vs. the Nazi bureaucracy)
    • Does Capitalist Modernity make us more susceptible to authoritarianism?
      • Adorno: The Authoritarian Personality
      • Bauman: the Milgram and Zimbardo experiments and the problem of responsibility

October 31st – Rights, Nationalism, and the State

  • Human Rights in the Post-War era
    • After WWII, the allied powers aimed to build legal guardrails to ensure that the Holocaust would never happen again. These included:
  1. An international human rights regime grounded in international law.
  2. A nation-state system that could formally participate in these international law agreements.
  • Two related problems that are discussed by this week’s readings
  • The Tokyo trial
    • International Military Tribunal for the Far East
      • Charged the Japanese military establishment with “crimes against peace”
      • Without something comparable to the Holocaust, prosecution focused on colonial expansion
      • Super awkward because:
        • The judges represented colonial powers
        • The emerging cold war opened up a “containment” defense
  • Key International Agreements
    • Charter of the United Nations (1945)
    • Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Dec. 9, 1948)
    • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Dec 10, 1948)
    • Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (4th convention, 1949)
  • Article II of the UN Genocide Convention (1948)
    • In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethical, racial or religious group, as such:
  1. Killing members of the group;
  2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
  3. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
  4. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
  5. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    • Drafting Committee led by Eleanor Roosevelt
      • Canadian John Peters Humphry was an important co-author
    • Framed rights outlined in the US Constitution and French Declaration as, explicitly, universal
    • “... whereas disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind…”
    • Questions:
      • Were the articles in this document realistically enforceable or merely ideals?
      • What did the UDHR accomplish?
  • Arendt on Totalitarianism
    • Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951) is still a key text for understanding what happened in Germany
    • Europe’s totalitarian impulses started with colonial projects
    • Totalitarianism relies on mass movements (not politics)
    • When totalitarianism movements gain, power, the remake facts and reality to fit their aspirations (often through violence)
    • Totalitarianism governs through terror, which “destroys the spaces between people”
    • Based on developing a coherent sense of the “nation”
  • Totalitarianism and the Right to Have Rights
    • Totalitarianism renders those outside the movement, or targets of the movement, as superfluous
    • Why have expensive concentration camps?
      • Camps are a logical outcome of totalitarian governance
      • They shape reality through “enforced oblivion” (whether refugee, labor, or extermination camps)
    • For the Nazis, Jewish citizens had to be denaturalized
    • Their “rightlessness” rendered them less than human
    • This is why Arendt sees the “right to have rights” as primary to any specific human right. Rights imply membership in a political community
      • What are the two definitions of “rights” in this formulation (according to Benhabib)?
  • Benhabib & Arendt on Nation-States
    • Rights in the “nation-state”
      • States are legal entities that exist in an international system
      • Nations describe the different ways “the people” in political communities identify themselves
    • The nation is pre-political
    • “the nation was an eternal organic body, the product of inevitable growth of inherent qualities; it explains peoples, not in terms of political organizations, but in terms of biological superhuman personalities” (Arendt in Benhabib, pg 62)
  • The Origins of Nationalism
    • Three paradoxes of nationalism:
      • Relatively recent to historians, but framed as ancient to nationalists
      • Formally universal (everyone has one), but widely exclusionary
      • Politically powerful, but philosophically incoherent
    • A product of the Enlightenment:
      • Linguistic move away from Latin as the language of political power
      • Separation of religion and political authority

November 7th – The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitanism

  • Rights and Justice Beyond Nationalism
    • The logic of universal rights (including the right to have rights) runs counter to the logic of nationalism
      • Nationalism is about drawing boundaries that exclude people
      • National membership is necessary for basic rights
    • What alternatives to nationalism could guarantee rights?
    • Three options
      • Internationalism: a community of nation-states
      • Globalization: global economic integration
      • Cosmopolitanism: a global civil society
  • Empire: the worst option!
    • Empire: territorial, economic and cultural control over multiple nations by a single sovereign power
    • Arendt: colonization/imperialism undermined the legal foundations of European states
    • Empire building caused two world wars
    • Created humanitarian problems rather than “civilized peoples”
    • It was hard to quit: lag time between the end of WWII and decolonization
  • Internationalism
    • In terms of human rights, this is the dominant option for much of the post-war 20th century
    • Forms the foundation of international law
    • Assumes system of national legal frameworks that support intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) like the United Nations
    • Supports agencies that focus on vulnerable groups (e.g. refugees)
    • Partly premised on cold war logics (states were important in a “bi-polar” world)
  • Globalization: Remember the 1990s!?
    • After the fall of the Soviet Union, a long list of new countries were “open for business”
    • Free trade agreements (e.g. NAFTA) made it easier for global corporations to expand
    • Global shipping and telecommunications expanded
    • Global institutions became important managers of this growth (IMF, World Bank, WTO)
  • Is Economic Globalization a New Phenomenon?
  • World-Systems Theory
    • Core societies dominate and exploit societies on the periphery
    • Periphery societies provide resources and labour
    • This creates a dynamic social relationship that produces profit in the core and dependency in the periphery
    • The “development of underdevelopment”
  • On Global Cultural Hegemony
    • Does global capitalism have a culture?
    • Hegemony: the manipulation of common sense to maintain the status quo
    • How is global capitalism related to “culture”? And is there a global mono-culture?
    • What are the good and bad things that come from a more interconnected world?
  • Globalization and Terrorism
    • Most visible backlash against globalization was “global terrorism”
    • Attempts to use the tools of globalization against the forces of global capital
    • A nominally “traditionalist” focus, but built as a global movement
    • How do we move past “Jihad vs. McWorld”?
  • Cosmopolitanism
    • (Western) Philosophical foundations
    • Ancient Greek (Stoic) concept of Kosmou polites (or world citizen):
      • All humans have the faculty of reason → reason is a moral virtue → all humans have basic moral worth
  • Kant’s cosmopolitan right (1795):
    • Based on a universal obligation to hospitality
    • Recognizes a “communal possession of earth’s surface”
    • This “right” to hospitality will naturally guarantee a “perpetual peace” as interaction with foreigners increases mutual understanding and disseminates reason and enlightenment
    • Implies a form of a natural law applied at a global level (how that is applied is a harder question)
  • Liberal Cosmopolitanism
    • How to reconcile cosmopolitanism with pluralism?
      • Concentric value spheres argument:
      • We organize our moral obligations based on proximity (e.g. family, friends, community, culture, nation, globe) → the goal should be to collapse the distance
    • Focus on international institutions that help people make connections
    • These should be grounded in an “overlapping consensus” of principles that everyone can agree on
  • Critiques of Liberal Cosmopolitanism
    • Liberal cosmopolitanism often undersells the problems posed by global capitalism
    • How to embrace some universal norms (e.g. human rights) while also challenging the effects of global capitalism and empire? [note: this is the Douzinas critique]
    • Expanding democracy beyond the nation-state?
    • US foreign policy and cultural hegemony is the “elephant in the room” for all discussions of cosmopolitanism
    • Calhoun (2003): the liberal conception often turns into a cosmopolitanism of the airport lounge
  • Fine (2009) On Cosmopolitanism
    • Cosmopolitanism was originally framed as a global applications of the Rights of Man
    • After 1989, it experienced a comeback, but…
    • It got bogged down in formalism vs. realism debates
      • Formalism: a type of thinking focused on working through conceptual problems
      • Realism: a type of thinking focused on observable practices, interests, and power
    • Can cosmopolitanism be more than just utopian or ideological?
  • Cosmopolitanism From Below?
    • Top-down theories of cosmopolitanism too often require some form of official recognition, followed by institutional responses
    • What about other forms of global solidarity that people build in the margins? (e.g. immigrant communities in global cities)
    • Do we need global institutions to guarantee global rights? (e.g. the problem of the Russian war on Ukraine)
    • Is there an alternative type of global justice that can be based on different types of solidarity? (e.g. justice for indigenous peoples, workers rights, gender justice, racial justice)
    • What could be built from these forms of Global Solidarity?

November 14th – Race, Justice and Systemic Racism

  • Is this the end of human rights?
    • Arendt/Benhabib: Germany showed the importance of a universal “right to have rights”,
      • Also how fragile universal rights can be
    • Douzinas: The rise of “security” as the primary national concern moves us away from human rights.
      • Human rights is still an important language for grassroots movements
  • How does social justice go beyond human rights?
    • Young: Oppression is experienced by people as members of social groups
      • Social justice avoids universalism
    • Patzer: When it comes to indigenous rights, the Canadian State is concerned to limit indigenous right and title
      • Indigenous justice focuses on autonomy and self determination
    • Calhoun: Arguments for cosmopolitanism rights can look like just more freedom for the privileged and elite
      • But social justice could also be a source of global solidarity
  • Civil Rights vs. Racial Justice
    • Key differences between rights and justice:
      • Formal legal changes vs. the recognition of social-historical processes
      • Individualistic vs. systemic approach
      • Apolitical (at least in some interpretations) vs. overt politics
  • Coates: “The Case for Reparations”
    • Group mini-exercise:
  1. Why does Coates see Clyde Ross’s story as emblematic of the bigger problem?
  2. Why is redlining an example of institutional racism
  3. Why is black poverty in the United States unique?
  4. Why reparations and not a TRC?
  • Why did reparations work for Germany?
  • The Historical Politics of Racial Justice
    • The 1619 Project
    • Historical account that puts Slavery at the heart of the US economy and politics – part of a movement to develop a theory of racial capitalism
    • Black America has, in some ways, the most optimistic view of democracy
    • Huge conservative backlash against “critical race theory”
  • On Systemic Inequality
    • It is sometimes difficult to see inequality that is historical and institutionalized
    • It’s easier to see equality in individual terms (e.g. the equality vs. equity meme)
    • This makes inequality a resource question rather than a justice question
  • Racism Without Racists (Bonilla-Silva 2022 [2003])
    • Race: socially constructed but effects are real
    • Racial structure: the totality of the social relations and practices that reinforce white privilege
    • Racial ideology: the racially based frameworks used by actors to explain and justify (dominant race0 or challenge (subordinate race or races) the racial status quo
    • “The ruling ideology expresses as “common sense” the interest of the dominant race” (2022, pg. 10)
  • Colour-Blind Racism
    • A racial ideology that ignores the structural/institutional foundations of racism and white privilege
    • Generally, ascribes cultural explanations for racial inequality
    • Treats racism as a historical issue (e.g. no more racists)
    • A useful theory because it: (1) challenges common sense notions of race and (2) is based on data from white people themselves
  • A New form of Racism
    • Racism after the Jim Crow era
      • Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
      • Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
      • Policing and Incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
      • Economic Inequality: Formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Four Frames of Colour-Blind Racism
  1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore
  • Legacy of Bonilla-Silva’s Theory: Desmond & Emirbayer (2009)
    • Race is socially constructed (not a natural category)
      • Indigenous wasn’t a racial category until non-indigenous people came over
      • Susie Guillory Phipps and the 1/32 rule
      • South Africa - 3 racial categories are only 200 years old
      • The scientific basis of race is thin (more variation among than between “races”), but the social effects of race are vast
  • Race, Ethnicity and Nationality
    • Three overlapping symbolic categories
      • The problem of the category “Asian”
      • These categories are fluid (feeling Irish on St. Patrick’s Day, Canadian on Election Day, and Catholic on Easter)
      • People can choose to play up one category over another (African immigrants to the US teaching their Western-born children to speak with an accent)
      • Popular can shape legal classifications (e.g. immigration policy)
  • Five Fallacies about Racism
  1. Individualistic Fallacy
  • Assumes Racism is about ideas, prejudices and intentionality
  • Associates racism with crime (one is guilty or not of racism)
  • Instead, racism can be normal, institutional, habitual, unintentional, commonplace, polite, implicit, and even well meaning
  1. Legalistic Fallacy
  • Equates current law with racial progress
  • No racist laws = no racism
  • Law is not a mirror of society
  • Laws don’t determine social behaviour (laws against theft don’t eliminate theft)
  • Formal anti-segregation laws didn’t end segregation
  1. Tokenistic Fallacy
  • Assumes cases of individual success in politics, business or culture
  • Racism doesn’t exist because of Obama, Oprah
  • The exception proves the rule
  • Inequality still functions to exclude people from power (hence ongoing attempts to address the inequality – NFL coaches, Calles for a new VP, etc.)
  1. Ahistorical Fallacy
  • Assumes history doesn’t matter since things are better today
  • Present circumstances are unconnected to distant or even recent past
  • The present is a direct product of history
  • Everything, from the physical distribution of people in cities to family wealth to current opportunities are defined by history
  1. Fixed Fallacy
  • Assumes racism is fixed over time
  • Lynching doesn’t happen anymore so racism doesn’t exist
  • Equates racism with worst possible practices
  • Questions about whether “things are better today” have to account for how racism has changed
  • Maybe the sentiments behind lynching have just been reframed and rechanneled into a law enforcement narrative?
  • On Mass Incarceration
    • The historical myth of black criminality
      • Coates’ follow-up article on mass incarceration
    • Overall context of mass incarceration in the United States
      • 1970s - 150 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • 2007 - 767 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • (Russia - 450 per 100,000)
    • Impact on black communities (in 2021)
      • 1,240 per 100,000 Black residents incarcerated
      • 261 per 100,000 White residents incarcerated
  • Politics of Mass Incarceration
    • Willie Horton ad I
      • The Presidential campaign of George H.W. Bush brought “dog-whistle” racism to national political advertising
      • The “tough on crime” political strategy was popular for the next two decades
    • Willie Horton ad II
      • Fed into the “broken windows” strategy
      • For-profit prisons exploited this market
      • Racialized prisoners were, in many states, stripped of basic citizenship rights
  • On Police Brutality
    • The US Dept. of Justice does not collect data on people killed by police
    • Since 2015, multiple groups have started databases of people shot and killed by police (Fatal Force project)
  • Reflecting on Summer 2020
    • What progress towards racial justice has been made since George Floyd was murdered?
    • What has been the backlash?
    • Are we closer to racial justice now?

November 21st – Justice and Systemic Racism + Global Rights, Local Justice and Gender-Based Violence

Justice and Systemic Racism

  • Is this the end of human rights?
    • Arendt/Benhabib: Germany showed the importance of a universal “right to have rights”, also how fragile universal rights can be
    • Douzinas: The rise of “security” as the primary national concern moves us away from human rights.
    • Human rights is still an important language for grassroots movements
  • How does social justice go beyond human rights?
    • Young: Oppression is experienced by people as members of social groups
      • Social justice avoids universalism
    • Patzer: When it comes to indigenous rights, the Canadian state is concerned to limit indigenous right and title
      • Indigenous justice focuses on autonomy and self-determination
    • Calhoun: Arguments for cosmopolitan rights can look like just more freedom for the privileged and elite
      • But social justice could also be a source of global solidarity
  • Civil Rights vs. Racial Justice
    • Key differences between rights and justice:
      • Formal legal changes vs. the recognition of social-historical processes
      • Individualistic vs. systemic approach
      • Apolitical (at least in some interpretations) vs. overt politics
  • Coates: “The Case for Reparations”
    • What is redlining?
      • People who work in cityscaping would create a city plan that outlines areas where there were a large amounts of marginalized communities/immigrants and made it so people from those areas had less resources in those areas and had difficulty leaving
  • The Historical Politics of Racial Justice
    • The 1619 Project
      • Historical account that puts Slavery at the heat of the US economy and politics – part of a movement to develop a theory of racial capitalism
      • Black America has, in some ways, the most optimistic view of democracy
      • Huge conservative backlash against “critical race theory”
  • On Systemic Inequality
    • It is sometimes difficult to see inequality that is historical and institutionalized
    • It’s easier to see equality in individual terms (e.g. the equality vs. equity meme)
    • This makes inequality a resource question rather than a justice question
  • Racism Without Racists (Bonilla-Silva 2022 [2003])
    • Race: socially constructed but effects are real
    • Racial structure: the totality of the social relations and practices that reinforce white privilege
    • Racial ideology: the racially based frameworks used by actors to explain and justify (dominant race) or challenge (subordinate race or races) the racial status quo
    • “The ruling ideology expresses as “common sense” the interest of the dominant race” (2022, pg. 10)
  • Colour-Blind Racism
    • A racial ideology that ignores the structural/institutional foundations of racism and white privilege
    • Generally, ascribes cultural explanations for racial inequality
    • Treats racism as a historical issue (e.g. no more racists)
    • A useful theory because it: (1) challenges common sense notions of race and (2) is based on data from white people themselves
  • A New form of Racism
    • Racism after the Jim Crow era
      • Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
      • Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
      • Policing and Incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
      • Economic Inequality: Formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Four Frames of Colour-Blind Racism
  1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore
  • Legacy of Bonilla-Silva’s Theory: Desmond & Emirbayer (2009)
    • Race is socially constructed (not natural category)
      • Indigenous wasn’t a racial category until non-indigenous people came over
      • Susie Guillory Phipps and the 1/32 rule
      • South Africa - 3 racial categories; Brazil - at least 10 categories
      • Our contemporary categories are only 200 years old
      • The scientific basis of race is thin (more variation among than between “races”), but the social effects of race are vast
  • Race, Ethnicity and Nationality
    • Three overlapping symbolic categories
      • The problem of the category “Asian”
      • These categories are fluid (feeling Irish on St. Patrick’s Day, Canadian on Election Day, and Catholic on Easter)
      • People can choose to play up one category over another (African immigrants to the US teaching their Western-born children to speak with an accent)
      • Popular opinion can shape legal classifications (e.g. immigration policy)
  • Five Fallacies about Racism
  1. Individualistic Fallacy
  • Assumes Racism is about ideas, prejudices and intentionality
  • Associates racism with crime (one is guilty or not of racism)
  • Instead, racism can be normal, institutional, habitual, unintentional, commonplace, polite, implicit, and even well meaning
  1. Legalistic Fallacy
  • Equates current law with racial progress
  • No racist laws = no racism
  • Law is not a mirror of society
  • Laws don’t determine social behavior (laws against theft don’t eliminate theft)
  • Formal anti-segregation laws didn’t end segregation
  1. Tokenistic Fallacy
  • Assumes cases of individual success in politics, business or culture
  • Racism doesn’t exist because of Obama, Oprah
  • The exception proves the rule
  • Inequality still functions to exclude people from power (hence ongoing attempts to address the inequality – NFL coaches, Calls for a new VP, etc.)
  1. Ahistorical Fallacy
  • Assumes history doesn’t matter since things are better today
  • Present circumstances are unconnected to distant or even recent past
  • The present is a direct product of history
  • Everything, from the physical distribution of people in cities to family wealth to current opportunities are defined by history
  1. Fixed Fallacy
  • Assumes racism is fixed over time
  • Lynching doesn’t happen anymore so racism doesn’t exist
  • Equates racism with worst possible practices
  • Questions about whether “things are better today” have to account for how racism has changed
  • Maybe the sentiments behind lynching have just been reframed and rechanneled into a law enforcement narrative?
  • On Mass Incarceration
    • The historical myth of black criminality
      • Coates’ follow-up article on mass incarceration
    • Overall context of mass incarceration in the United States
      • 1970s - 150 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • 2007 - 767 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • (Russia - 450 per 100,000)
    • Impact on black communities (in 2021)
      • 1,240 per 100,000 Black residents incarcerated
      • 261 per 100,000 White residents incarcerated
    • Politics of Mass Incarceration
      • Willie Horton ad I
      • The Presidential campaign of George H.W. Bush brought “dog-whistle” racism to national political advertising
      • The “tough on crime” political strategy was popular for the next two decades
      • Willie Horton ad II
        • Fed into the “broken windows” strategy
        • For-profit prisons exploited this market
        • Racialized prisoners were, in many states, stripped of basic citizenship rights
    • On Police Brutality
      • The US Dept. of Justice does not collect data on people killed by police
      • Since 2015, multiple groups have started databases of people shot and killed by police (Fatal Force Project)
    • Reflecting on Summer 2020
      • What progress towards racial justice has been made since George Floyd was murdered? What has been the backlash?
      • Are we closer to racial justice now?

Global Rights, Local Justice and Gender-Based Violence

  • Gender, Justice and Culture
    • What is gender?
    • Why is “culture” so important when thinking about gender based violence?
    • Local culture vs. universal rights?
  • Gender Trouble by Judith Butler
    • Gender is a product of “Bodily Inscriptions”
    • Bodily inscription = something written onto the body
    • In post-structuralist thinking, the body is a text
    • We “read” each other and in, turn, label each other
    • Social interaction is coded, and those codes “signify” our understanding of the world
  • The Body and Culture
    • Butler cites Mary Douglas’ book Purity and Danger (example of structuralist anthropology)
    • Douglas: societies organize themselves around moral ideas of order/disorder, purity/impurity, normal/taboo
    • Lots of taboos around bodily functions (the body as chaotic, impure and taboo)
      • The body can’t be trusted (desire and pain)
      • The body as a site of moral judgement: food prohibitions in Leviticus, sodomy laws
      • The body as profane
    • Butler: this suggests a divide between the “interior” soul and the body – but which one represents the “real person”?
    • In many societies, bodies must be disciplined to clarify the moral order
  • From Interiority to Gender Performances
    • The rules governing the interior self and the body are often gendered
    • We create cultural narratives/frameworks that link the self and the body to provide order in society (e.g. hegemonic ideals of gender and sexuality)
    • This set-up assumes we have an interior gender that naturally corresponds to bodily sex
    • E.g. Being a “man” is defined by looking a certain way and acting/feeling a certain way (manly)
  • Performing Gender
    • Since biology doesn’t do strict binaries, we feel social pressure to continually “perform”, or express gender.
    • Many people get comfortable with strict binary versions of this performance because it provides order (*key point*)
  • Undermining Gender Binaries
    • The example of Drag shows how unstable such performances can be; it’s a parody of “normal” gender
    • Does the makeup reveal or contradict the “real” interior identity?
    • Is the ability to parody gender a form of privilege? (e.g. Trans people aren’t merely “performing”)
  • Political Backlash
    • Anti-Trans legislation as an attempt to make “traditional” notions of gender a political issue
    • Why is this a popular political strategy?
    • Is this just a product of the culture of Texas?
  • Questioning Culture (Merry 2006)
    • “Cultural” conceptions of gender help to reproduce negative outcomes such as gender-based violence
    • This can be wrapped up in conceptions of family, marriage, community, inheritance and child custody
    • Does the “right” to live free of violence contradict the “right” to express one’s own cultural difference?
  • Gender and “Civilized” Culture
    • Early Anthropologists (previously “orientalists”) measured civilization in relation to Western norms
    • This approach still exists in the background of organizations working for human rights
    • Globalization has reinvigorated this approach (in some ways)
    • How do anthropologists define culture today?
    • Culture as a repertoire of ideas and actions
  • Theories of Culture and Human Rights
    • Culture as tradition (or values)
    • Culture as national essence
    • Culture as contentious
      • Ways of doing things in particular circumstances
      • Always evolving and incorporating difference
    • Culture is everywhere
      • “Human rights law is itself primarily a cultural system. Its limited enforcement mechanisms mean that the impact of human rights law is a matter of persuasion rather than force” (pg 16)
  • International Rights and Local Culture
    • International NGOs have to balance universal definitions and power relations in the international system
    • Laws need to be legitimate in national contexts
    • Often family laws aim to follow existing practices, but otherwise treat family life as “private”
    • Challenging harmful practices like GBV often means connecting with activists working to change cultural practices
  • Limits of Western Feminism(s)
    • French protests against “gender theory” (as a threat to the French Republic)
    • 2nd wave feminists privileging the category of “woman”
    • Imperialist feminism’s (colonial feminism) focus on “cultural practices”
    • Carceral feminism targeting racialized men as a threat

November 28th – The Limits of Rights

  • What have major (non-COVID) protests been about?
  • Can human rights address these concerns?
    • 2008 Global financial crisis had its roots in the expansion of neoliberalism
    • Rise in populism (e.g. 2016) was a lasting effect of anti-globalization sentiment
    • This sentiment has been exploited by authoritarian governments and nationalist movements
    • …but is a return to international norms about human rights a satisfactory answer?
  • The Rise of Neoliberalism
    • After economic crises of the 1970s, the 1980s saw a constriction of the welfare state
      • Margaret Thatcher, UK, 1979
      • Ronald Reagan, US, 1980
    • This accelerated with globalization in the 1990s
  • The Crisis of Neoliberalism?
    • Cutback the intervention of the state so that the markets can govern/reflect the rest of society
    • David Harvey The Crisis of Capitalism
      • Human frailty = “human nature”, human predation
      • Institutional failures = failing banking system
      • Obsessed with a false theory
      • Cultural origins
      • Failure of policy
      • Systemic risk → international contradictions of capital accumulation
      • The excessive finance capital → excessive power of capital
      • Overcome the problem of effective demand with credit cards
      • More debt than ever
    • With the global financial crisis of 2008 and the Occupy movement of 2010, some asked whether neoliberal theories would bring down capitalism
    • What do we mean when we talk about neoliberalism?
      • An intellectual movement concerned with economic policy?
      • A justification for stricter spending?
      • A social/cultural movement towards individualism?
  • Human Rights after the Global Recession
    • Wealth inequality is now acknowledged as a serious problem
    • Can the language of human rights address this problem?
      • In legal terms?
      • Through global civil society?
      • Through geopolitics?
  • Spade: The limitations of legal frameworks
    • The example of Trans rights:
      • Anti-discrimination laws are hard to define
      • Anti-hate crime laws are not a deterrent
    • Injustice is practiced through “administrative violence” (or, the way institutionalized rules are interpreted and enforced)
    • Neoliberalism + Administrative violence: The underfunding of necessary public institutions makes them LESS flexible and adaptive.
  • Williams: Rights are still important
    • To those who have traditionally been disempowered, rights confer “equal status
    • Williams’ housing example: for Black people in New York, informal agreements were more dangerous than formal paperwork
  • Optional Group Exercise: Working with the readings
  1. In groups, find two passages in each of the readings that demonstrate the author’s argument about the value of rights.
  2. Discuss how you might summarize these points in your notes.
  • Social Justice as the driver of human rights?
    • Example: Housing Rights
      • Is housing broken?
      • Do people have a right to housing?

Reading Quizzes – Questions and Answers

According to the author, the claim of _________ is crucial to the history of human rights.

Answer: self-evidence

For the author, a human right becomes most relevant when…?

Answer: we feel horrified by its violation

In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson lists a series of "facts" that detail…?

Answer: Injuries committed by the King of England

In the years just before the American Revolution, the American colonists started embracing the ideals of universal rights as a foundation for declaring independence. This had a great advantage over simply expanding the existing "rights of Englishmen," which would have merely led to what political outcome?

Answer: Minor reforms

The author argues that human rights emerged in the late 18th century, partly due to the rise of a political ideal of moral autonomy. Moral autonomy in this sense included what?

Answer: Reason and Independence

According to Douzinas, human rights have become an ideological justification for Western capitalism. True or False?

Answer: True

When discussing the "end of human rights" Douzinas suggests that in the post-9/11 era, even some liberal commentators have admitted that ______ trumps human rights.

Answer: Security

The author outlines 6 of the common and sometimes contradictory uses of the term "human rights." Which of the following is NOT listed among these uses?

Answer: Human rights are a clear and self-evident set of rules

In the text, the author describes negative rights as "blue" and positive rights as "red." What are negative, or "blue," rights?

Answer: Civil and political rights

What approach does Douzinas use to complicate and question the traditional linear history of human rights?

Answer: A genealogical approach

According to the author, oppression has two meanings in its traditional usage?

Answer: Tyranny and colonial domination

The Marxist idea of class is important because it helps reveal the structure of which of the five forms of oppression?

Answer: Exploitation

Defining groups as aggregates or associations are examples of what the author calls…

Answer: Methodological individualism

According to the author, theories of justice often leave out acts of violence because such theories often incorrectly assume that violence is…?

Answer: An individual act

Which of the five forms of oppression creates what W.E.B. Du Bois called "double consciousness"?

Answer: Cultural Imperialism

The Holocaust was different from historical forms of mass violence because it replaced rage and mob violence with what?

Answer: bureaucracy and obedience to authority

For Bauman (1989), without ____________ there would be no Holocaust

Answer: modern civilization

Bauman claims that, within the German bureaucracy, moral responsibility was replaced with what?

Answer: technical responsibility

According to Bauman (1989), in 1941 the Holocaust was…?

Answer: unimaginable

What occupational metaphor does Bauman use to describe the logic of "modern genocide"?

Answer: The gardener

According to Chapter 1 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are distinct from other countries in the former British empire because they are..?

Answer: settler colonies

What doctrine, which gave European powers right to indigenous lands, was partly based on the assumption that these lands were terra nullius?

Answer: The Doctrine of Discovery

According to Patzer (2014), the Supreme Court of Canada has been reluctant to characterize the residential school system as whole as wrong, and has instead focused on what?

Answer: Legally actionable cases of abuse

1. In his chapter on "Residential Harm and Colonial Dispossession," Patzer (2014) argues that we need to retrace the contours of what the colonizer called the _________, which encompassed residential schools, disempowerment, and land dispossession.

Answer: The Indian problem

Patzer (2014) argues that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in Canada is similar to the South African TRC in that it shares a ___________ ethos that may, in fact, depoliticize the process of reconciliation.

Answer: therapeutic

According to Jensen (2016), the history of human rights is defined by the coexistence of what?

Answer: Proclamation and denial

Which of the following was NOT mentioned by Jensen as a difficult issue that arose in 1948 as the language of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was debated?

Answer: Cuba's restriction of religious freedom

According to the "juridico-civil usage" of the term "rights," rights claims generate reciprocal obligations and therefore require a what?

Answer: Community

According to the author (Benhabib), one of the important points of Arendt's writing is that she draws a connection between an undermined conception of rights and the rule-of-law under totalitarianism, and what?

Answer: European colonial projects in Africa

According to the author (Benhabib), both Kant and Arendt saw that the conflict between universal human rights and _________ was the "root paradox at the heart of the territorially bounded state-centric international order."

Answer: Sovereignty claims

According to Calhoun (2003), cosmopolitanism is too often presented as simply ____________, which is free of determinate social bases and consistent with the outlooks found in global intellectual spaces such as Brussels, Davos, or even in elite universities.

Answer: Global citizenship

In response to scholars who have criticized the practicality of universal human rights, the author (Fine 2009) suggests that cosmopolitans should endeavor to create a what?

Answer: A global human rights culture

For Calhoun (2003), social solidarity is not just produced by common cultural identities resulting from racial, ethnic, or gender categories. Solidarity and the expression of shared interests also requires what?

Answer: Public discourse

According to the author (Fine 2009), the human rights revolution has suffered major reversals since what event?

Answer: The Anglo-American war on terror

Which of the following is NOT one of the four elements of Kant's "cosmopolitan point of view"

Answer: Affirming the legality of national boundaries

An essentialized understanding of culture contributed to what 1990s debate that assumed global standards of social justice were incompatible with local cultural practices?

Answer: The universalism-relativism debate

According to Merry, labeling culture as ___________ evokes an evolutionary vision of change from a primitive form to something like civilization.

Answer: Traditional

In her book Human Rights and Gender Violence, Merry (2006) warns that while human rights tend to promote ideas of individual autonomy, equality, choice and secularism, they might also contribute to what?

Answer: Cultural homogenization

The common interpretation of culture as national essence or identity comes from what historical European intellectual movement?

Answer: German romanticism

One reason violence against women is difficult to define as a human rights violation is because..?

Answer: it is often perpetrated by private citizens

Spade (2015) points out that legal efforts to ensure Trans rights have focused on anti-discrimination laws and what?

Answer: Hate crime laws

For Williams (1989), the Black desire for rights is defined by knowledge of a world without what?

Answer: Meaningful boundaries

For historically disempowered people, the conferring of rights elevates one's status to a(n) __________, according to Williams (1989)

Answer: social being

When it comes to Trans rights, discrimination law tends to take a _________ perspective that individualizes oppression and ignores systemic forms of discriminations.

Answer: Perpetrator

Williams (1989) argues that one's relationship to law is defined by one's sense of what?

Answer: Empowerment

Exam Review

Theme/Concept

Definition/Relation

Author/Week

Major themes of the Enlightenment (Hunt)

  • Human rights are natural/universal in that we know it a human right violation when we are horrified by its violation - a shared internal feeling
  • Distancing from the idea of the church/god as authority/governance in society
  • Recognition of state/nation authority
  • Promotion of science and reason rather than religion as the source of authority
  • Recognition of others as morally autonomous, self-possessive
  • Human rights exist thanks to empathy: shared/collective experience creates the social context and can alter people’s minds to reshape that social context
  • Political potential shifted the discussion from natural rights to rights of mankind/humanity
  • Torture was abolished: degrades public morals and is unworthy of the enlightened society
  • Changed the concept of honor: social distinctions became less prevalent in individualist society

Social Contract Theory

An idea, theory or model that usually, although not always, concerns the legitimacy of the authority of the state over the individual

People join together to give up some of their freedom to a sovereign authority (an entity with the right to make and enforce rules)

This is beneficial because it brings humans out of a “state of nature” - giving up some “unalienable” rights allows us to live in peace and order (Hobbes)

Hunt ‘Inventing Human Rights’, week 2

Sources of “rights” language in the

US and French revolutions

  • The Declaration of the Rights of Man
  • “Universal Rights of free men” - meaning free-born people
  • Paradoxical - how can they be “universal” if they are restricted to free men
    • Implicitly deny rights to women, slaves, etc - anyone who is not a white man
    • Also implies requiring individual moral autonomy and being self-possessive - black people, women and children didn’t comply with this image and were excluded
  • Rights of British citizens Countered by the US Declaration of Independence asserting independence from the monarchy
  • Gendered language of the declaration
  • Colonial language - exclusion of Indigenous people
  • Universal declarations were not readily embraced by leaders
    • Once people caught wind of discussion of expanding human rights, they did not want to “close that door” but rather lean into it
  • Advanced through expansions of empathy post-enlightenment regarding torture, epistolary novels exposing realities of others
  • The words of “declarations” imposes a seizure of sovereignty where rights come from the people themselves rather than a ruler
    • Also allow for the justification of governments by their guarantee of universal human rights that establish the contractual foundation for social life
  • French Declaration
    • Took inspiration from Americans asserting self-governance
    • They took it a step further by declaring all citizens are born free/equal, not just french men
    • Had a galvanizing effect on subordinated categories of people to assert their rights
  • Bill of Rights (in constitution) returned to exclusionary, citizens-only rights under the new government

Hunt ‘Inventing Human Rights’, Week 2

Paradox of human rights

  • Kant’s (Fine reading) idea of cosmopolitanism underlies framework for human rights - that all individuals deserve to be the same - this defines Western saviourism ideas
  • Hunt: how can human rights be inherent/natural if they have to be declared?
  • Multiple meanings of human rights: human rights are used as an excuse to violate human rights during a state of war on conflict. Western saviourist attitude of needing to “fix” other countries to fit Western ideas of what human rights should be, justify violence to get there
  • Western countries use human rights to justify moral superiority through humanitarianism
  • Human rights offer only paradoxes. Douzina’s theorises the ‘end of human rights’ as he claims that human rights have been overtaken by performative actions of powerful people.
  • Douzinas discusses human rights at the time the piece was written and seeks to exhibit to the reader that human rights have gone beyond ‘human rights’ and progressed to a point of being used as a political tool for governmental authority and individual desire.
    • “Does security trump human rights?”
  • Rights have become colonized, and in the west people have become spectators
  • There is a degree of separation between the west and the suffering in the rest of the world
  • Douzinas claims the paradox to be that the purported strengths of Human rights are actually the downfall

Week 3 September 26: Douzinas “The paradoxes of Human Rights”

Week 9 November 7: Fine “The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitanism”

Western humanism

Western humanism = moral education + universal potential for

salvation

Visual themes of humanitarianism

  1. Personification - Pity
  2. Humanist Care - Sympathy
  3. Massification - Repugnance
  4. Rescue - Nobleness

Limitations of the labor movement

Labour Movement: Fought for the protection of the common interests of workers.

  • Creation of Union

Problem: Exclusion of some workers in the favor of others.

  • Often anti-immigrant
  • Only sometimes focused on women’s labor
  • Racist undercurrent
    • Jim Crow and the Great Migration

Young’s definition of a social group

Young’s definition of social group and 5 types of oppression

  • Young suggests that “Justice should refer not only to distribution but also to the institutional conditions necessary for the development and exercise of individual capacities and collective communication and cooperation”(Young, 1990, p. 39).
  • This idea of justice refers primarily to two forms of injustice, those being disabling constraints, oppression, and domination.
  • The text discusses the concept of oppression and its different forms. It argues that oppression is not only the result of tyrannical rulers as it has been envisioned historically but it can also be systemic and embedded in the everyday practices of a seemingly well-meaning liberal society.
  • The author identifies five categories of oppression: exploitation, marginalization, powerlessness, cultural imperialism, and violence. Through these five forms of oppression Young challenges the mode of analyzing and evaluating social structures and practices that have been inundated with the language of liberal individualism in the United States.
  • Young hopes that this method will create a better understanding of oppression and how individuals can experience layers of different kinds of oppression resulting from their group identification. Young states that she aims to “Systematize the meaning of the concept of oppression as used by these diverse political movements, and to provide a normative argument to clarify the wrongs the term names” (Young, 1990, p. 40). Through this methodology one might be able to evaluate claims that a social group is oppressed, through the application of these five criteria Young believes that one could compare oppressions without reducing them to a common essence or claiming one is more fundamental than another (Young, 1990, p.64).
  • “Social groups are not entities that exist apart from individuals, but neither are they merely arbitrary classifications of individuals, according to attributes which are external to, or accidental to their identities. Admitting the reality of social groups does not commit one to reifying collectivities, as some might argue. Group meetings, particularly, constitute people's identities in terms of cultural forms, social situations, and history that group members know as theirs, because these meanings have been either forced upon them or forged by them or both. Groups are real not as substances but as forms of social relations” (Young, 1990, p. 44)

Young’s five types of oppression

Exploitation

  • When one group benefits at the expense of another
  • Often through economic means: can involve unfair labour wages/practices, or extraction/exploitation of resources without adequate compensation

Marginalization

  • Exclusion of certain groups from meaningful participation in social, economic, or political activities
  • Limits their opportunities and access to resources

Powerlessness

  • Lack of agency or influence a certain group experience within societal structures
  • These groups may be unable to shape decisions that affect their lives,

Cultural Imperialism

  • When a dominant culture imposes its values, beliefs, and norms on another
  • Can lead to devaluation or erasure of diverse cultural practices and identities

Violence

  • Used to maintain and reinforce systems of oppressionIncludes overt physical violence
  • To threat or use force to intimidate another group

Marion Young- Week 4 (Oct. 3)

Young, Iris Marion (1990) "Five Faces of Oppression" in Justice and the Politics of Difference. Princton, NJ: Princton University Press. Pgs. 39-65

Settler colonialism

  • “Settler colonialism” is a term used to distinguish phenomenons that are related to, but distinct from the experience of colonial empires
    • A type of colonialism in which the indigenous peoples of a colonized region are displaced by settlers who permanently form a society there
    • Historically, colonial empires exploited native populations (e.g. for labour and goods)
    • Settlers often worked to expel, assimilate or otherwise “remove” traces of the native population
    • Colonialism reproduces itself; Settler Colonialism extinguishes itself
    • Examples: the colonialism found in India v.s. Canada

October 10

Patzer (2014) - Residential School Harm and Colonial Dispossession

Politics of the TRC (does it hold the

Canadian State responsible?)

  • Product of compromise - individual lawsuits to large claim
  • ​​Offered those directly and indirectly (ex: generational trauma) affected by the legacy of Residential schools the chance to share their experiences of the relationship between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian government including physical, emotional, cultural and sexual trauma
  • Residential schools rooted in colonialism and the belief in assimilating Indigenous populations into European Christian culture.
  • Canadian gvt and state viewed Indigenous culture as inferior and sought to eliminate them
  • October 10 - Week 5
  • Final Report on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 1: Introduction (pgs. 1-6); Chapter 1 (pgs. 9-24)

The Canadian State’s understanding of

“aboriginal rights” in law

  • Aboriginal rights are recognized in the Constitution Act of 1982 through sections 35(1)(2)(3)(4), discussing the topic of treaty rights and to whom they are given. →very vague sections
  • The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) recognized Aboriginal persons' rights to self-determination, and autonomy, the right to free, prior, and informed consent, and the right not to be subjected to forced assimilation.
  • Despite their abundant Indigenous populations, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the United States initially voted against UNDRIP. Canada eventually reversed their vote in 2010.

SCC Interpretations of Indigenous Rights:

  • R. v. Sparrow (1990) – found that there is an Aboriginal right to hunt and fish. The Fisheries Act doesn’t supersede s. 35(1).
  • R. v. Van der Peet (1996) – “To be an aboriginal right an activity must be an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture of the aboriginal group claiming the right”
  • R. v. Powley (2003) – Aboriginal rights can have modern iterations AND extend to Métis people. Also introduced was the “Powley test”

Effects of the SCC approach to rights:

  • Ex: Fishing rights were guaranteed by the Peace and Friendship Treaty of 1752.
  • These rights were largely ignored until the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed them see R. v Marshall (1999)
  • Class 5: October 10th
  • Final Report on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 1: Introduction (pgs. 1-6); Chapter 1 (pgs. 9-24)
  • Patzer, Jeremy (2014) “Residential School Harm and Colonial Dispossession.” In Woolford et al. (eds.) Colonial Genocide in Indigenous North America. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Pgs. 166-185

Social Conditions of European Fascism

  • Financial crisis
  • Populist anger against elites: this means that populists wanted the people to be heard but elites wanted to keep all the power to themselves
  • Appeals to Nationalism (Treaty of Versailles): these treaties held Germany responsible
    • War reparation and inflation, the political system and liberty such as freedom for speech, and relevant social movements developed nationalism which evolved into fascism.
  • Expansion of pseudo-scientific claims about race which is the idea that we should separate people by their race
  • Critiques of democracy, parliamentarianism and liberal pluralism
    • E.g. Carl Schmitt: all politics were based on the distinction between friend and enemy

Week 6

October 17th

The Holocaust as a “modern”

phenomenon

  • Certain norms and institutions made the holocaust feasible

“Without modern civilization and its most central essential achievements~ would be no Holocaust”

“we live in a type of society that made the Holocaust possible, and that contained nothing which could stop the Holocaust from happening”.

  • Therefore we must study the holocaust.

“modernity contributed to the Holocaust more directly than through its own weakness and ineptitude”

“the role of modern civilization in the incidence and the perpetration of the Holocaust was active, not passive. It suggests that the Holocaust was as much a product, as it was failure of modern civilization”

  • A product of european civilization
  • Grounded in modern logics

“political and military forces are neither counterbalanced nor restrained by resourceful and influential social ones.”

  • This changed social power and these weaknesses led to strife

What led to the upheavals:

  1. They left primal controls of order
  2. They weekend the possibility of organized action on a supra communal level (the grassroots, the level of the street)
  • The social organization of higher order fell apart
  • Communal mechanisms of social regulation all disappeared and local communities ceased to be self-sufficient and self-reliant
  • Difference between the violence which is spur of the moment
  • Emotional violence, night of smashing
  • The difference was they made a bureaucratic machinery that was meant to remove the mention
  • How do we allocate resources to do certain things, if you extract things far enough then it becomes easier to kill
  • Programs were put into place to make it distant to others, it was easier to make it not emotional

Bauman - October 17th

  • It was about the situations that led to make the holocaust feasible

Legal problems presented by the

Holocaust

​​-how bureaucracy enabled the discrimination through the administration

-admin makes it systemic far more dangerous than simple antisemitic violence because that anger goes away eventually but it is difficult to stop systemic issues

-holding the entire state accountable is very hard to do

-how does the international community hold states accountable?

-paradox of the nation-state system enforcing human rights standards

The key issues in the Nuremberg

Trials

-issues established international law to hold accountable

-genocide was not illegal so it was complicated to charge the germans

-the allies + russia were not innocent but were also not held accountable

-first time the world came together to agree on a legal matter

-trials around doctors, lawyers, and business people *note both trials

The right to have rights

  • This is the only human right according to Hannah Arendt; if we cannot agree on every single right, we can at least agree on the fact that humans have a right to have rights
  • She means that this is synonymous with the right to citizenship and the membership in a political community, the right to not be stateless (States are important because they guarantee rights)
  • Human and citizen rights are the same, or, there is no such thing as human rights but only citizen rights

Benhabib, Seyla (2004) “The Right to Have Rights: Hannah Arendt on the contradictions of the nation-state” Pgs. 49-69

&

Jensen, Steven L.B. (2016) The Making of International Human Rights. New York: Cambridge University Press. Pgs. 18-47

Week #8

Nationalism as the belief in an imagined

community

  • The idea that the nation is an imagined group of people, we have an idea of who we mean when we mention a nation (we imagine their characteristics)
  • Nationalism is creating an identity that everyone in the nation can share, it is what can join them together as a nation and create an imagined community (an ideal that is not executed in practice)
  • The concept of nationalism is outdated, which makes it exclusionary
  • Three paradoxes of nationalism:
  • It is relatively recent to historians but framed as ancient to nationalists
  • Formally universal (everyone has one) but widely exclusionary
  • Politically powerful but philosophically incoherent
  • Nationalists often see the legal state as subservient to the nation

Benhabib, Seyla (2004) “The Right to Have Rights: Hannah Arendt on the contradictions of the nation-state” Pgs. 49-69

Week #8

Decolonization and post-war Human

Rights debates

Globalization and the backlash against it

  • cosmopolitanism imagines a global order in which the idea of human rights is an operative principle of justice, with mechanisms of global governance established specifically for their protection
  • cosmopolitanism is criticized for not recognizing the unpleasant realities behind the facade of human rights or, indeed, for evading reality altogether
    • White solipsism
    • Euro-centric
  • Expansion or trade = unethical work
  • WORLD SYSTEMS THEORY
  • Cosmopolitanism
  • Globalization: in the 90s primarily, after the fall of Soviet Union, new countries were “open for business”. Free trade agreements made it easier for global corporations to expand. Global shipping telecommunications expanded, and Global institutions became important managers of this growth (IMF, World Bank, WTO).
  • World-Systems Theory: core societies dominate and exploit societies on the periphery. Periphery societies provide resources and labour. This creates a dynamic social relationship that produces profit in the core and dependency in the periphery.
  • Most visible backlash against globalization was “global terrorism”. Globalization can facilitate terrorism by making the movement of people and funds much easier. Due to faster and cheaper information and communications, the losers of globalization witness the prosperity of the winners. Radicalization ensues and exacerbates already existing cultural and religious divides (Fine 2009 reading).
  • Populism and war on terror

The Holocaust as the Defining Crisis of Western Modernity

Cosmopolitanism (and its limits)

  • Cosmopolitanism imagines a global order in which the idea of human rights is an operative principle of justice, with mechanisms of global governance established specifically for their protection
  • cosmopolitanism is criticized for not recognizing the unpleasant realities behind the facade of human rights or, indeed, for evading reality altogether
    • White solipsism
    • Euro-centric
  • Expansion or trade = unethical work
  • WORLD SYSTEMS THEORY

The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitianism

The four frames of Color-blind racism

  • The four frames of color blind racism :
  • 1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  • 2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  • 3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  • 4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore

Novemeber 14: -*

.

Coates, Ta-Nehisi (2014) “The Case for Reparations” in The Atlantic (June) Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (2022) Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States (6th edition). New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Pgs. 79-103.

How the “new racism” is different from

Jim Crow laws

  • A new form of racism
  • Racism after the Jim Crow era
  1. Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
  2. Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
  3. Policing incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
  4. Economic inequality: formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Jim Crow laws
  1. Collection of state and local statutes that legalized racial segregation
  2. Open discrimination
  3. Characterized by visible and overt discrimination
  • New racism
  1. Operates more subtly, often embedded within social structures and institutions, and emphasized colour blind rhetoric
  2. Manifests through systemic inequalities in areas such as education, employment, housing and criminal justice
  3. Often involves symbolic racism, with biases being implicit and expressed through coded language or policies

Week 9:

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (2022) Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States (6th edition). New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Pgs. 79-103

The effects of Redlining on generational

wealth

  • Redlining: Discriminatory practice in which services (financial and otherwise) are withheld from potential customers who reside in neighborhoods classified as "hazardous" to investment; these neighborhoods have significant numbers of racial and ethnic minorities, and low-income residents
  • In terms of generational wealth, the cycle of redlining can be hard to break because if one generation is not provided with the necessary resources to live comfortably, it’s going to be hard for the future generations to gain those resources, and so on
  • This bargain was not granted to black people, who repeatedly paid a higher price for citizenship and received less in return
  • Redlining destroyed the possibility of investment wherever Black people lived
  • Not officially outlawed until 1968 by the Fair Housing Act
  • Reports of redlining by banks have continued because the damage had already been done

Week 9:

Coates, Ta-Nehisi (2014) “The Case for Reparations” in The Atlantic (June)

Gender as a performance

  • Gender as a social construct (Judith Butler)
  • There are multiple genders which exist
  • Drag queens as an example of gender performance (males dress up as females but don’t socially identify as a female)

The universal human rights vs. cultural

relativism debate (and why this is a

limited way of approaching gender justice)

  • Form of violence to try to apply universal rights to different cultures
  • Definition of universal means something different in the West and something different in the East
  • How to apply human rights in places with different cultures
  • In Work with local activist on ground

Week 21: Merry, Sally Engle (2006) Human Rights and Gender Violence: Translating International Law into Local Justice. Chicago; London: The University of Chicago Press. Pgs. 1-35

The limits of international definitions of

gender violence

The limits of international definitions of gender violence have a lot to do with the the large variety of cultures/religions that have their own views about what gender violence is. “169 states (governments) have ratified the (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women) CEDAW”

  • “Human rights law is itself primarily a cultural system.
  • Its limited enforcement mechanisms mean that the impact of human rights law is a matter of persuasion rather than force, of cultural transformation rather than coercive change.
  • Its documents create new cultural frameworks for conceptualizing social justice.
  • It is ironic that the human rights system tends to promote its new cultural vision through a critique of culture.”

CHAPTER ONE
“Introduction: Culture and Transnationalism”

Sally Engle Merry

The recent history of neoliberalism and

austerity

  • The 70s saw various economic crises
  • During this time there was more focus on healthcare and education rather than basic necessities
  • Rise of neoliberalism in the 70s, but really emerged in the 80s
  • Used as a justification for stricter spending and marked a social and cultural movement towards individualism
  • Critiques of neoliberalism include the idea that it makes it almost impossible for the non wealthy to live
  • Has resulted in the underfunding of social services which makes then less efficient - need to funded to guarantee rights
  • Saw austerity measures as a possible answer to addressing concerns that came up during the 2008 global financial crisis
  • International cooperation was rejected by many countries
  • Led to anti austerity protests such as the one in chile

The relationship between human rights

and the rise of neoliberalism

Original LGBTQ+ rights were advocated in direct opposition to the state and police. However, through budget cuts that have reduced the social safety net, LGBTQ+ members have come to rely upon the police to enforce and protect their rights. This aligns with the neoliberalism aspect of cost cutting which eventually led to LGBTQ+ people relying on the state to protect their rights.

Spade (2015) Normal Life Chapter 2

Two main legal approaches to Trans rights

Anti-discrimination laws

Anti-hate crime laws

Similarities: Both individualize hate and focuses on the individual as causes of hate rather than systemic inequalities

Issues: Anti-discrimination laws are hard to define and take a long time to be implemented. Anti-hate crime laws don’t act as deterrents to those that would commit them anyways.

Spade (2015) Normal Life Chapter 2

Why rights are still useful for marginalized

communities

Rights are important to those who have been traditionally disempowered, rights confer “equal status”

Example: Williams’ housing example: for Black people in New York, informal agreements were more dangerous than formal paperwork

“The conferring of rights is symbolic of all the denied aspects of humanity: rights imply a respect that places one in the referential range of self and others”

November 21.

LAWS 2105 B - Social Justice & Human Rights

Social Justice & Human Rights

Sept 19th - The Political Language of Human Rights

  • Generalized language/usage of “man” in Declarations to refer to everyone (in modern times)
  • Colonial Language used while on colonized land → used to oppress people indigenous to Canada
  • History is always a project of the present (i.e. it always is a product of social and political context)
    • Be critical of what points are made
    • Projection of perspective onto social and political contexts
  • Human rights require 3 interlocking qualities
    • Natural (inherent in human rights)
    • Equal (the same for everyone)
    • Universal (applicable everywhere)
  • Natural rights were easier to except than equality and universality due to social and political context
  • European Enlightenment (1650-1800)
    • Before this time it was called the “dark ages”
    • Foreground reasoning, science, law to reason and support understandings or thought (science and reason)
      • This included both technological advances and the rational organization of society
      • Scientific progress (like Galileo’s theories on a heliocentric universe) led to people being worried about the implications it would have on the public’s morals
      • Romanticizing the past due to the progress made by industrialization
    • Individualism (and individual moral autonomy)
      • How is political and moral authority organized?
      • Who had access to the work of God?
      • The church and royalty had the most power because of the access to information/knowledge.
      • Moral power over those who were not literate or positions of privilege
      • When the word of God (the Bible) became more widespread there was a rise in literacy which allowed people to begin to question the traditional basis of religious or royal authority
    • European expansion and colonialism
      • Empire building as a european
      • The start of the modern “world system” in the 15th century
        • International economy, trades routes, capitalism in colonies
      • By the 18th century, a new class of “merchants” were starting to gain political power
        • Going abroad to other countries/continents to take precious resources and sell them in areas where it is harder to acquire
        • Making immense wealth and begin to challenge the monarchy
        • Change in political empire
        • Larger distribution of inequality, change in class systems
        • Moving away from an absolute monarchy, merchants and others acquiring wealth demanding to have their voices heard
  • Changes in the foundation of Law and Authority
    • If not religion, is it society?
    • How is it organized? How should it be?
    • Central problem in social and political thought: Changing understandings of what IS rethinking what OUGHT to be
    • Philosophers criticize/comment on current political/social changes
    • Hobbes talked about Social Contract Theory
      • If people are more than just subjects, what are they? And how should they relate to each other?
      • People join together to give up some of their freedom to a sovereign authority (an entity with the right to make and enforce rules)
      • This is beneficial because it brings humans out of a “state of nature”
      • Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan (1651)
    • Jean-Jacques Rousseau: a different type of social contract
      • “Discourse on Inequality” (1755)
        • Broader statement on society
        • Things go wrong the moment people start gathering more than they need (i.e. society corrupts)
        • The “noble savage” myth → we strip away of society we go back to being at peace and with nature → infantilizes non-europeans
        • Reason and progress are not necessarily good without moral cultivation
      • The Social Contract (1762)
        • About citizenship, how to be a good citizen, being engaged in politics and the community
        • The road to freedom is through politics
        • Foundations of good decisions is people engaging their will in a civilized way
        • We are better off combining to form a collectivity to make decisions for ourselves
        • This is far better than the traditional sources of authority
  • The Rise of the Modern State
    • Morality backed by religion which then supports political movements
    • Depicted in popular media and art to promote a message
  • The American Revolution
    • Political context of the American and French revolutions: the modern state as a product of challenges to traditional authority based on these themes
      • Who has the right to rule?
    • Hunt (in chapter. 3): there were two types of rights discussed in the 1760s and 1770s
      • Particular rights of (British) citizens
      • Universal rights of “free men”
        • Deserving of universal rights based on their status (wealthy, white men who were property owners)
      • Colonists facing taxation issues, not as autonomous as they wish, Boston tea party
    • The limitations of the first led to the embrace of the ideas of Universal rights
      • Note the list of grievances against the King of England in the Declaration of Independence
    • New Legal Scholarship on Natural Rights
      • Protestants related to religion and what defines man
      • Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui: “The idea of Right, and even more that of natural law, are manifestly related to man’s nature. It is therefore from this nature itself of man, from his constitution, and from his condition that we must deduce the principles of this science” (Hunt 2007, pg 120)
      • Rights thus reflected the IS and the OUGHT of 18th century American politics
      • Hunt talks about this in terms of the “problem of self-evidence”
      • What is our nature? What are we owed as “men”?
    • The Paradox of Slavery
      • Jefferson had a slave taking care of him when he wrote that all men are created equal
      • The 1619 Project: The 1619 Project is a long-form journalism endeavor developed by Nikole Hannah-Jones, writers from The New York Times, and The New York Times Magazine focused on subjects of slavery and the founding of the United States.
      • The language of universal rights may have been a practical strategy, but it also opened a door to political action
      • Once you start to pick up the language and concepts of human rights you can come to other conclusions that contradict other/older concepts
    • Return to Particular Rights
      • US Constitution signed in 1791
      • This included the Bill of Rights (first 10 amendments of the Constitution)
      • These rights applied specifically to US citizens (and their relationship to the new US government)
  • The French Revolution

Causes of the French Revolution

  • Inspired by the Americans and their revolution
  • Economic: Financial crisis and increasing poverty
  • Social: Growth of the industrial middle class
  • Intellectual: New ideas about political autonomy
  • Political: Out of touch Monarchy that responded to crisis with force
  • Hunt: Additional Factors
    • Rise of literacy allowed social/political messages to be told through media like literature which caused large groups of people to have:
      • Emotion and Empathy: Julie ou la Nouvelle Héloïse
      • Distaste for Torture: Voltaire: The Calas Affair
        • The preparatory question: torture to get answers about company/details of the crime
  • Human Rights as a reflection of social changes
    • Practical concerns about the power of the State
      • American Rev.: Federal v.s. State government
      • French Rev.: Fear of royal backlash
    • Rationalization of public affairs
      • Status and honour v.s. Transparent rules as a basis for law (Max Weber)
    • More focus on individual lives
      • Epistolary novels, access to the everyday experiences of others
    • The struggle for rights was limited by the paradoxes of oppressions
      • Yet resistance to this oppression helped carry forward these rights
  • The Paradox of Colonialism
    • Points out the rise of the bourgeoisie in France was boosted by the slave trade
    • Toussaint L’Ouverture lead the slave revolt in 1791 that was partly inspired by the principles of the French Revolution
    • France (Louis Bonaparte) tried to re-establish slavery but was eventually defeated
    • In many ways, the Haitian revolution pushed the principles of the French Revolution further than France

September 26th - Human Rights and Humanitarianism

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October 3rd - Human Rights, Justice and Social Groups

  • Three Overlapping History
    • Human Rights
      • Principle: protection from state violence
      • Practice: writing/amending legal documents
    • Humanitarianism
      • Principle: West as savior (civilisation → security)
      • Practice: professionalization of international aid
    • Social Justice
      • Principle: liberal values aren’t experienced equally
      • Practice: protesting and advocating for change
  • The Roots of (Western) Social Justice
    • Society is the root of injustice
    • Justice is found through the direct expression of the “general will”
      • I.e. through moral reasoning, we can figure out justice for ourselves – no need for priests or kings tell us
      • Rousseau’s pamphlet on “A Discourse on inequality”
        • Very liberal in his thinking but not in practice
        • Didn’t think highly of women despite speaking so intensely on universal human rights
    • Wollstonecraft: How could Rousseau be so right about moral reasoning, but unable to extend his ideas to women?
      • Who is the “we” in a political community?
  • Karl Marx: Injustice and Capitalism
    • 1840s-1870s
    • Discussion on class exploitation and unequal distribution of wealth and labour
    • Historical Background of Marx’s Thought:
      • Germany was in a political flux as the Holy Roman Empire transitioned to a unified state
      • There was an open struggle to define the future → revolution felt inevitable
      • Especially as the industrial revolution was changing Germany & Europe (1830s & 40s)
      • These changes were altering the social and political → new social “classes” were emerging as important political players
    • Marx’s Political Engagements
      • Argued the French Revolution was a “bourgeois revolution” and that human rights were “bourgeois rights” and applied to a very small group of people
      • Marx learned from workers’ struggles for political recognition
      • Also learned the power of these ideas when he was forced to leave Germany, and then France (settled in England)
      • His early writing dealt with the plight of workers in capitalist society
      • Theorized historical progress driven by the injustices of capitalism (e.g. The Communist Manifesto)
    • Marx’s Theory of Exploitation
      • Labour is the only thing that can add value to an exchange
      • Yet labourers are rarely compensated based on the amount of value they produce
        • Small wages and bourgeois taking the majority of the amassed wealth and then buying colonial lands to increase their wealth in other ways nd repeating the cycle
      • Despite the expansion of formal rights, and the growth of the industrial economy, the living conditions of labourers deteriorated during the industrial revolution
  • Labour Movement as a Social Justice Movement
    • 8 hour day movement → Haymarket Affair: On May 4, 1886, a bomb detonated near Haymarket Square in Chicago after police arrived to break up a rally in support of striking workers. This protest is one of a number of strikes, demonstrations, and other events held by workers and their supporters in Chicago from May 1-4 to advocate for an eight hour workday.
      • Galvanized labour and incentivized more employers to have 8 hour work days
    • The Winnipeg General Strike: labour action about metal and factory workers fighting against inhumane working conditions do to the exploitation of growing numbers of people in need of work
      • Influx of immigrants
      • After WW1
      • General Strike: union and non union members don’t work in order to protest bad working conditions
    • Limitations of the North American Labour Movement
      • Problem: unions are good for workers, but what if they exclude some workers in favour of others?
        • Often anti-immigrant
        • Only occasionally focused women’s labour
          • E.g. the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
      • Racist undercurrent
        • Jim Crow and the Great Migration
        • W.E.B. Du Bois’ study of Philadelphia
    • Progress Era Movements for Social Justice
      • Suffrage movements: Women’s right to vote
      • Prohibition Movement: making alcohol illegal and ending liquor trafficking
        • Seen as one of the first feminist movements
        • (Remember still included anti-immigrant sentiments)
    • Great Depression and the New Deal
      • The New Deal:
        • Series of social welfare policies
        • Assistance programs for employment, housing, old age security, etc..
        • Foundation for post-WW2 reconstruction of Europe and the rise of the Welfare state
      • The Post-War Welfare State
        • US economy emerged from WW2 in good shape
        • 1950s saw the rise of a middle class (aided by government assistance)
        • This economic success was not shared equally (mainly racism)
    • The Rise of “New Social Movements”
      • Primarily associated with the 1960s (but with roots in the 1950s)
      • Social Justice isn’t just about class and labour rights
        • Civil Rights Movement
        • Feminist Movement
        • American Indian Movement
        • Gay/Queer Liberation Movement
        • Peace Movement
      • Addressed multiple forms of oppression
    • Young: A New Definition of Justice
      • Traditional theories of justice are distributive
      • Justice is also about individual and collective capacities
      • Injustice often takes the form of disabling constraints (e.g. oppression)
        • Young: Oppression and Social Structure: “...oppression also refers to systematic constraints on groups that are not necessarily the result of the intentions of a tyrant. Oppression in this sense is structural, rather than the result of a few people’s choices or policies. Its causes are embedded in unquestioned norms, habits, and symbols, in the assumptions underlying institutional rules and the collective consequences of following those rules” (pg. 41)
      • What is a Social Group?
        • “A social group is defined not primarily by a set of shared attributes, but by a sense of identity” (pg. 44)
        • Why is it problematic to ground a theory of justice in individual experience?
        • Are human rights primarily focused on individuals or groups?
      • Five faces of oppression
        • Exploitation
        • Marginalization
        • Powerlessness
        • Cultural Imperialism
        • Violence

October 10th - Settler Colonialism and Indigenous Rights

  • On power and historical narratives
    • Western Human Rights: innovative legal framework, or limited political paradox?
    • Western Humanism: universal moral philosophy, or justification for imperialism?
    • Western Social Justice Movements: democratic freedom in action, or proof that much injustice still exists?
      • Important to the modern day (labour movement and the 8 hour work day) but very exclusionary at the time
      • Next section: modern expressions of power and the institutionalization of injustice
        • Institutionalization: the process by which particular ideas, norms, and behaviours turn into the formal rules for how to do things.
  • On History and Justice
    • How do you address injustice that has become institutionalized? (e.g. the displacement and mistreatment of indigenous peoples)
    • How does the history of colonial rule shape indigenous experiences in Canada?
    • Example: recent reports suggest that the mortar on Parliament Hill came from the Algonquin burial ground across the river.
  • What is Settler Colonialism?
    • “Settler colonialism” is a term used to distinguish phenomenon that are related to, but distinct from the experience of colonial empires
      • Historically, colonial empires exploited native populations (e.g. for labour and goods like the case of the British empire and India)
      • Settlers often worked to expel, assimilate or otherwise “remove” traces of the native population
    • A new area of study and a language for justice
      • Temporally indeterminate: “Settler invasion is a structure and not an event” (Veracini, 2011, in the journal Settler Colonial Studies)
      • Colonialism reproduces itself; Settler Colonialism extinguishes itself
        • Settler colonialism separates itself from the act of colonization and instead becomes the norm
    • Responding to Settler Colonialism
      • The experiences and responses to settler colonialism are different than other postcolonial situations
      • Decolonizing does not mean “putting the past behind us” (that is partly the goal of settler colonialism)
      • Why might the language of decolonizing be useful or important? (e.g. nation to nation relationships)
      • Settler Colonial Studies as a rethinking and retelling of history
  • Aboriginal Rights in Modern Canada
    • From the Constitution Act of 1982:
      • 35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.
      • (2) In this Act, “aboriginal peoples of Canada” includes the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada
      • (3) For greater certainty, in subsection (1) “treaty rights” includes rights that now exist by way of land claims agreements or may be so acquired.
      • (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the aboriginal and treaty rights referred to in subsection (1) are guaranteed equally to male and female persons.
    • SCC Interpretations of Aboriginal Rights
      • R v. Sparrow (1990) – found that there is an aboriginal right to hunt and fish. The Fisheries Act doesn’t supersede s. 35(1).
      • R. v. Van der Peet (1996) – “To be an aboriginal right an activity must be an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture of the aboriginal group claiming the right”
      • R. v. Powley (2003) – Aboriginal rights can have modern iterations AND extend to Métis people. Also introduced the “Powley test”.
    • Effects of the SCC approach to rights
      • The case of Mi’kmaq lobster fishing and settler violence:
        • See this summary of the story from BBC News
        • Fishing rights were guaranteed by the Peace and Friendship Treaty of 1752.
        • These rights were largely ignored until the supreme court of canada affirmed them
        • Government of Canada has looked to the SCC, while the Court tends to introduce ambiguous language
          • In this case, the definition of a “moderate livelihood”
        • This legal ambiguity creates space for violence (e.g. the RCMP can stand back and wait for order while a lobster pound burns)
        • This can be read as part of a cycle whereby the “rights” of indigenous peoples are affirmed and then violated by the State
          • Which raises the question of whether a rights framework makes sense without a focus on social justice
  • UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    • Adopted by UN General Assembly in 2007
      • Settler Colonial countries voted against (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, United States)
    • Rights to self-determination, autonomy, and self-government
    • Right to Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC)
    • Right to not be subjected to forced assimilation
    • Asserts that States should provide mechanisms to prevent or redress actions of depriving indigenous people of their cultural identities
  • UNDRIP and Canada
    • Canadian economy built around extractive industries, which poses a problem for Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC)
    • Canadian state worried about the so-called “Indian Veto”
    • Legal Concepts RElated to FPIC (Patzer 2019)
      • Fiduciary Duty: Established in Guerin v. The Queen in 1984. Subsequently rolled back as “overshooting” Crown responsibility
      • Justifiable Infringement: R v. Sparrow established Aboriginal rights, but also outline the possibility that these rights could be infringed upon
        • Delgamuukw v. British Columbia (1997) defined Aboriginal Title and suggested that Federal OR Provincial governments could justifiably infringe on it to develop “Agriculture, forestry, mining, and hydro-electric power”
      • Duty to Consult: The SCC, however, has created a legal obligation for the Crown to engage a meaningful process of consultation if it wants to infringe Aboriginal rights or title
        • This is as far as the SCC has gone on FPIC
  • Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission
    • Product of the 2006 Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA)
    • Established in 2008 and published its report in 2015
    • Aimed to provide a history of the residential school system as well as the first-hand experiences of residential schools (truth)
    • Also aimed to build a path towards reconciliation between the Canadian gov’t and indigenous peoples
    • Proposed 94 “Calls to Action” to redress the historical harm caused by residential schools and colonial dispossession
  • Truth Commissions and Transitional Justice
    • Truth (and Reconciliation) Commissions became popular in the 1980s among “new” democracies (e.g. focused on “disappeared persons” in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile)
    • Following dictatorships, they aimed to move a nation out of a cycle of violence
    • South African TRC is a prominent example of the politics of TRCs
      • Included provisions for Amnesty
      • Didn’t address the inequality created by the Apartheid system (no reparations)
  • Expanding the Frame of Justice
    • Patzer (2014) talks about the “therapeutic ethos” as a depoliticized frame for reconciliation. What does this mean?
    • Why might the Canadian TRC represent a limited form of justice?

October 17th – The Holocaust as the Defining Crisis of Western Modernity

  • A Brief History of the Holocaust
    • US Holocaust Memorial Museum Film (graphic content warning)
    • How to teach events like the Holocaust?
      • Genocides are not inevitable
      • They have complex histories and causes
      • Don’t compare tragedies
      • Humanize the people involved (victims, perpetrators, collaborators)
      • Don’t exploit emotional responses to the subject
        • E.g. Godwin’s law
  • Social and Political Conditions of Facis, in Germany
    • Financial crisis
    • Populist anger against elites
    • Appeals to Nationalism (Treaty of Versailles)
    • Expansion of pseudo-scientific claims about race
    • Critiques of democracy, parliamentarianism and liberal pluralism
      • E.g. Carl Schmitt: all politics is based on the distinction between friend and enemy
  • Effects of Industrialization and Urbanization
    • Berlin was very multicultural city at the end of the 19th century
    • As a growing industrial urban centre, Berlin challenged social norms and values
    • Modernism: an artistic and cultural movement that embraced the experiences and values of industrial life
      • E.g. Bauhaus architecture
    • This led to resentment, and movements embraced various types of “returning” to better times
    • Nazi interest in neo-classical architecture is an example
  • Cultural Conditions of Pre-War Germany (and the narratives of Anti-Semitism)
    • Simmel on “Metropolis and Mental Life” (1903): people in the city must adopt a “blasé attitude”
    • Simmel on “the Stranger”: “The man who comes today and stays tomorrow… [t]he stranger is an element of the group itself” (1908)
    • Jewish communities in Europe embodied the stranger as a social type: close in proximity, but socially remote
    • Historically, a difficult group for the Christian church to make sense of (related but not the same)
  • Modernism and Technological Utopianism
  • Modernism and the Dark Side of Technology
  • Walter Benjamin on Progress and History
    • A Klee painting named ‘Angelus Novus’ shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing in from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such a violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress. (Walter Benjamin, 1940)
  • Catastrophic Logic of Technology
  • Law and the Holocaust
    • Questions raised by the Holocaust
      • How could a “civilized” country (built on Western “rule-of-law”) carry out such a horrible program?
      • Is justice possible here?
      • How can we prevent genocide in the future?
      • How should we treat people who have been stripped of their rights?
  • The Aftermath of the Holocaust
    • Nuremberg Trials 1945-1948
      • International Military Tribunal
      • First trial - 22 Defendants (only German)
      • Charges:
        • Crimes against peace
        • Conspiracy to wage aggressive war
        • War crimes
        • Crimes against humanity
      • Crimes against humanity as a “new” offense
        • Was this retroactive justice?
      • Legal due process or “victors’ justice”?
  • Difficult Questions of the Nuremberg Trials
    • Can there be an internationally recognized legal framework?
    • The conventions and treaties cited in this trial mostly dealt with war crimes (Hague Conventions 1899 & 1907; 3rd Geneva Convention 1929)
      • What about the treatment of civilians?
    • Awkwardness of violations by Allied powers (Stalin’s crimes against humanity, US’s atom bombs)
    • Four Allied powers had to work together to agree on a framework for the trial
    • This framework laid the groundwork for later UN conventions
      • Important discursive shift from “civilization” to “humanity”
  • Legacy of Nuremberg
    • Trials also covered legal, economic and medical issues
    • Nuremberg Principles: Principles that were the underlying justification of the trials (e.g. the “superior orders” defense is not acceptable)
      • Problem for international law: what if disobeying orders puts one in danger?
    • Nuremberg Code: Research ethics guidelines resulting from the Doctors trials
    • The IG Farben Trial: introduced rules around profiteering and corporate responsibility for crimes against humanity
  • Hannah Arendt: Learning from the Holocaust
    • Like many scholars, worked to make sense of the Holocaust
    • Arendt fled Germany in 1933, Paris in 1940. Arrived in New York in 1941
    • Politics is about responsibility and action
    • Germans abdicated their political responsibility and failed to act
  • The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (1961)
    • Eichmann was captured in Argentina and extradited to Israel
    • Eichmann trial: a political exercise?
    • Arendt: “Justice… demands seclusion, it permits sorrow rather than anger, and it prescribes the most careful abstention from all the nice pleasures of putting oneself in the limelight” (pg. 6)
    • The Eichmann trial, on the other hand, was set up as if it were a play complete with a stage and an audience
  • Narratives that Arendt Dismisses
    • Nazis as evil super-villains
      • This gives figures like Eichmann more credit than they deserve
    • Nazi government as ultra organized and efficient
      • There was constant administrative jockeying an unclear communication of rules and laws
    • Nazi administration as “ruthless and tough”
      • Example of some Western European countries pushing back against final solution measures
  • Modernity and the Holocaust
    • The Holocaust was a social tragedy grounded in the logics of modern society
    • In this sense, it’s not just “something that happened to Jewish people” but a product of European “civilization”
    • The difference being the rationalization and scale of the tragedy (spontaneous violence of pogroms vs. the Nazi bureaucracy)
    • Does Capitalist Modernity make us more susceptible to authoritarianism?
      • Adorno: The Authoritarian Personality
      • Bauman: the Milgram and Zimbardo experiments and the problem of responsibility

October 31st – Rights, Nationalism, and the State

  • Human Rights in the Post-War era
    • After WWII, the allied powers aimed to build legal guardrails to ensure that the Holocaust would never happen again. These included:
  1. An international human rights regime grounded in international law.
  2. A nation-state system that could formally participate in these international law agreements.
  • Two related problems that are discussed by this week’s readings
  • The Tokyo trial
    • International Military Tribunal for the Far East
      • Charged the Japanese military establishment with “crimes against peace”
      • Without something comparable to the Holocaust, prosecution focused on colonial expansion
      • Super awkward because:
        • The judges represented colonial powers
        • The emerging cold war opened up a “containment” defense
  • Key International Agreements
    • Charter of the United Nations (1945)
    • Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Dec. 9, 1948)
    • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Dec 10, 1948)
    • Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (4th convention, 1949)
  • Article II of the UN Genocide Convention (1948)
    • In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethical, racial or religious group, as such:
  1. Killing members of the group;
  2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
  3. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
  4. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
  5. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    • Drafting Committee led by Eleanor Roosevelt
      • Canadian John Peters Humphry was an important co-author
    • Framed rights outlined in the US Constitution and French Declaration as, explicitly, universal
    • “... whereas disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind…”
    • Questions:
      • Were the articles in this document realistically enforceable or merely ideals?
      • What did the UDHR accomplish?
  • Arendt on Totalitarianism
    • Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951) is still a key text for understanding what happened in Germany
    • Europe’s totalitarian impulses started with colonial projects
    • Totalitarianism relies on mass movements (not politics)
    • When totalitarianism movements gain, power, the remake facts and reality to fit their aspirations (often through violence)
    • Totalitarianism governs through terror, which “destroys the spaces between people”
    • Based on developing a coherent sense of the “nation”
  • Totalitarianism and the Right to Have Rights
    • Totalitarianism renders those outside the movement, or targets of the movement, as superfluous
    • Why have expensive concentration camps?
      • Camps are a logical outcome of totalitarian governance
      • They shape reality through “enforced oblivion” (whether refugee, labor, or extermination camps)
    • For the Nazis, Jewish citizens had to be denaturalized
    • Their “rightlessness” rendered them less than human
    • This is why Arendt sees the “right to have rights” as primary to any specific human right. Rights imply membership in a political community
      • What are the two definitions of “rights” in this formulation (according to Benhabib)?
  • Benhabib & Arendt on Nation-States
    • Rights in the “nation-state”
      • States are legal entities that exist in an international system
      • Nations describe the different ways “the people” in political communities identify themselves
    • The nation is pre-political
    • “the nation was an eternal organic body, the product of inevitable growth of inherent qualities; it explains peoples, not in terms of political organizations, but in terms of biological superhuman personalities” (Arendt in Benhabib, pg 62)
  • The Origins of Nationalism
    • Three paradoxes of nationalism:
      • Relatively recent to historians, but framed as ancient to nationalists
      • Formally universal (everyone has one), but widely exclusionary
      • Politically powerful, but philosophically incoherent
    • A product of the Enlightenment:
      • Linguistic move away from Latin as the language of political power
      • Separation of religion and political authority

November 7th – The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitanism

  • Rights and Justice Beyond Nationalism
    • The logic of universal rights (including the right to have rights) runs counter to the logic of nationalism
      • Nationalism is about drawing boundaries that exclude people
      • National membership is necessary for basic rights
    • What alternatives to nationalism could guarantee rights?
    • Three options
      • Internationalism: a community of nation-states
      • Globalization: global economic integration
      • Cosmopolitanism: a global civil society
  • Empire: the worst option!
    • Empire: territorial, economic and cultural control over multiple nations by a single sovereign power
    • Arendt: colonization/imperialism undermined the legal foundations of European states
    • Empire building caused two world wars
    • Created humanitarian problems rather than “civilized peoples”
    • It was hard to quit: lag time between the end of WWII and decolonization
  • Internationalism
    • In terms of human rights, this is the dominant option for much of the post-war 20th century
    • Forms the foundation of international law
    • Assumes system of national legal frameworks that support intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) like the United Nations
    • Supports agencies that focus on vulnerable groups (e.g. refugees)
    • Partly premised on cold war logics (states were important in a “bi-polar” world)
  • Globalization: Remember the 1990s!?
    • After the fall of the Soviet Union, a long list of new countries were “open for business”
    • Free trade agreements (e.g. NAFTA) made it easier for global corporations to expand
    • Global shipping and telecommunications expanded
    • Global institutions became important managers of this growth (IMF, World Bank, WTO)
  • Is Economic Globalization a New Phenomenon?
  • World-Systems Theory
    • Core societies dominate and exploit societies on the periphery
    • Periphery societies provide resources and labour
    • This creates a dynamic social relationship that produces profit in the core and dependency in the periphery
    • The “development of underdevelopment”
  • On Global Cultural Hegemony
    • Does global capitalism have a culture?
    • Hegemony: the manipulation of common sense to maintain the status quo
    • How is global capitalism related to “culture”? And is there a global mono-culture?
    • What are the good and bad things that come from a more interconnected world?
  • Globalization and Terrorism
    • Most visible backlash against globalization was “global terrorism”
    • Attempts to use the tools of globalization against the forces of global capital
    • A nominally “traditionalist” focus, but built as a global movement
    • How do we move past “Jihad vs. McWorld”?
  • Cosmopolitanism
    • (Western) Philosophical foundations
    • Ancient Greek (Stoic) concept of Kosmou polites (or world citizen):
      • All humans have the faculty of reason → reason is a moral virtue → all humans have basic moral worth
  • Kant’s cosmopolitan right (1795):
    • Based on a universal obligation to hospitality
    • Recognizes a “communal possession of earth’s surface”
    • This “right” to hospitality will naturally guarantee a “perpetual peace” as interaction with foreigners increases mutual understanding and disseminates reason and enlightenment
    • Implies a form of a natural law applied at a global level (how that is applied is a harder question)
  • Liberal Cosmopolitanism
    • How to reconcile cosmopolitanism with pluralism?
      • Concentric value spheres argument:
      • We organize our moral obligations based on proximity (e.g. family, friends, community, culture, nation, globe) → the goal should be to collapse the distance
    • Focus on international institutions that help people make connections
    • These should be grounded in an “overlapping consensus” of principles that everyone can agree on
  • Critiques of Liberal Cosmopolitanism
    • Liberal cosmopolitanism often undersells the problems posed by global capitalism
    • How to embrace some universal norms (e.g. human rights) while also challenging the effects of global capitalism and empire? [note: this is the Douzinas critique]
    • Expanding democracy beyond the nation-state?
    • US foreign policy and cultural hegemony is the “elephant in the room” for all discussions of cosmopolitanism
    • Calhoun (2003): the liberal conception often turns into a cosmopolitanism of the airport lounge
  • Fine (2009) On Cosmopolitanism
    • Cosmopolitanism was originally framed as a global applications of the Rights of Man
    • After 1989, it experienced a comeback, but…
    • It got bogged down in formalism vs. realism debates
      • Formalism: a type of thinking focused on working through conceptual problems
      • Realism: a type of thinking focused on observable practices, interests, and power
    • Can cosmopolitanism be more than just utopian or ideological?
  • Cosmopolitanism From Below?
    • Top-down theories of cosmopolitanism too often require some form of official recognition, followed by institutional responses
    • What about other forms of global solidarity that people build in the margins? (e.g. immigrant communities in global cities)
    • Do we need global institutions to guarantee global rights? (e.g. the problem of the Russian war on Ukraine)
    • Is there an alternative type of global justice that can be based on different types of solidarity? (e.g. justice for indigenous peoples, workers rights, gender justice, racial justice)
    • What could be built from these forms of Global Solidarity?

November 14th – Race, Justice and Systemic Racism

  • Is this the end of human rights?
    • Arendt/Benhabib: Germany showed the importance of a universal “right to have rights”,
      • Also how fragile universal rights can be
    • Douzinas: The rise of “security” as the primary national concern moves us away from human rights.
      • Human rights is still an important language for grassroots movements
  • How does social justice go beyond human rights?
    • Young: Oppression is experienced by people as members of social groups
      • Social justice avoids universalism
    • Patzer: When it comes to indigenous rights, the Canadian State is concerned to limit indigenous right and title
      • Indigenous justice focuses on autonomy and self determination
    • Calhoun: Arguments for cosmopolitanism rights can look like just more freedom for the privileged and elite
      • But social justice could also be a source of global solidarity
  • Civil Rights vs. Racial Justice
    • Key differences between rights and justice:
      • Formal legal changes vs. the recognition of social-historical processes
      • Individualistic vs. systemic approach
      • Apolitical (at least in some interpretations) vs. overt politics
  • Coates: “The Case for Reparations”
    • Group mini-exercise:
  1. Why does Coates see Clyde Ross’s story as emblematic of the bigger problem?
  2. Why is redlining an example of institutional racism
  3. Why is black poverty in the United States unique?
  4. Why reparations and not a TRC?
  • Why did reparations work for Germany?
  • The Historical Politics of Racial Justice
    • The 1619 Project
    • Historical account that puts Slavery at the heart of the US economy and politics – part of a movement to develop a theory of racial capitalism
    • Black America has, in some ways, the most optimistic view of democracy
    • Huge conservative backlash against “critical race theory”
  • On Systemic Inequality
    • It is sometimes difficult to see inequality that is historical and institutionalized
    • It’s easier to see equality in individual terms (e.g. the equality vs. equity meme)
    • This makes inequality a resource question rather than a justice question
  • Racism Without Racists (Bonilla-Silva 2022 [2003])
    • Race: socially constructed but effects are real
    • Racial structure: the totality of the social relations and practices that reinforce white privilege
    • Racial ideology: the racially based frameworks used by actors to explain and justify (dominant race0 or challenge (subordinate race or races) the racial status quo
    • “The ruling ideology expresses as “common sense” the interest of the dominant race” (2022, pg. 10)
  • Colour-Blind Racism
    • A racial ideology that ignores the structural/institutional foundations of racism and white privilege
    • Generally, ascribes cultural explanations for racial inequality
    • Treats racism as a historical issue (e.g. no more racists)
    • A useful theory because it: (1) challenges common sense notions of race and (2) is based on data from white people themselves
  • A New form of Racism
    • Racism after the Jim Crow era
      • Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
      • Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
      • Policing and Incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
      • Economic Inequality: Formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Four Frames of Colour-Blind Racism
  1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore
  • Legacy of Bonilla-Silva’s Theory: Desmond & Emirbayer (2009)
    • Race is socially constructed (not a natural category)
      • Indigenous wasn’t a racial category until non-indigenous people came over
      • Susie Guillory Phipps and the 1/32 rule
      • South Africa - 3 racial categories are only 200 years old
      • The scientific basis of race is thin (more variation among than between “races”), but the social effects of race are vast
  • Race, Ethnicity and Nationality
    • Three overlapping symbolic categories
      • The problem of the category “Asian”
      • These categories are fluid (feeling Irish on St. Patrick’s Day, Canadian on Election Day, and Catholic on Easter)
      • People can choose to play up one category over another (African immigrants to the US teaching their Western-born children to speak with an accent)
      • Popular can shape legal classifications (e.g. immigration policy)
  • Five Fallacies about Racism
  1. Individualistic Fallacy
  • Assumes Racism is about ideas, prejudices and intentionality
  • Associates racism with crime (one is guilty or not of racism)
  • Instead, racism can be normal, institutional, habitual, unintentional, commonplace, polite, implicit, and even well meaning
  1. Legalistic Fallacy
  • Equates current law with racial progress
  • No racist laws = no racism
  • Law is not a mirror of society
  • Laws don’t determine social behaviour (laws against theft don’t eliminate theft)
  • Formal anti-segregation laws didn’t end segregation
  1. Tokenistic Fallacy
  • Assumes cases of individual success in politics, business or culture
  • Racism doesn’t exist because of Obama, Oprah
  • The exception proves the rule
  • Inequality still functions to exclude people from power (hence ongoing attempts to address the inequality – NFL coaches, Calles for a new VP, etc.)
  1. Ahistorical Fallacy
  • Assumes history doesn’t matter since things are better today
  • Present circumstances are unconnected to distant or even recent past
  • The present is a direct product of history
  • Everything, from the physical distribution of people in cities to family wealth to current opportunities are defined by history
  1. Fixed Fallacy
  • Assumes racism is fixed over time
  • Lynching doesn’t happen anymore so racism doesn’t exist
  • Equates racism with worst possible practices
  • Questions about whether “things are better today” have to account for how racism has changed
  • Maybe the sentiments behind lynching have just been reframed and rechanneled into a law enforcement narrative?
  • On Mass Incarceration
    • The historical myth of black criminality
      • Coates’ follow-up article on mass incarceration
    • Overall context of mass incarceration in the United States
      • 1970s - 150 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • 2007 - 767 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • (Russia - 450 per 100,000)
    • Impact on black communities (in 2021)
      • 1,240 per 100,000 Black residents incarcerated
      • 261 per 100,000 White residents incarcerated
  • Politics of Mass Incarceration
    • Willie Horton ad I
      • The Presidential campaign of George H.W. Bush brought “dog-whistle” racism to national political advertising
      • The “tough on crime” political strategy was popular for the next two decades
    • Willie Horton ad II
      • Fed into the “broken windows” strategy
      • For-profit prisons exploited this market
      • Racialized prisoners were, in many states, stripped of basic citizenship rights
  • On Police Brutality
    • The US Dept. of Justice does not collect data on people killed by police
    • Since 2015, multiple groups have started databases of people shot and killed by police (Fatal Force project)
  • Reflecting on Summer 2020
    • What progress towards racial justice has been made since George Floyd was murdered?
    • What has been the backlash?
    • Are we closer to racial justice now?

November 21st – Justice and Systemic Racism + Global Rights, Local Justice and Gender-Based Violence

Justice and Systemic Racism

  • Is this the end of human rights?
    • Arendt/Benhabib: Germany showed the importance of a universal “right to have rights”, also how fragile universal rights can be
    • Douzinas: The rise of “security” as the primary national concern moves us away from human rights.
    • Human rights is still an important language for grassroots movements
  • How does social justice go beyond human rights?
    • Young: Oppression is experienced by people as members of social groups
      • Social justice avoids universalism
    • Patzer: When it comes to indigenous rights, the Canadian state is concerned to limit indigenous right and title
      • Indigenous justice focuses on autonomy and self-determination
    • Calhoun: Arguments for cosmopolitan rights can look like just more freedom for the privileged and elite
      • But social justice could also be a source of global solidarity
  • Civil Rights vs. Racial Justice
    • Key differences between rights and justice:
      • Formal legal changes vs. the recognition of social-historical processes
      • Individualistic vs. systemic approach
      • Apolitical (at least in some interpretations) vs. overt politics
  • Coates: “The Case for Reparations”
    • What is redlining?
      • People who work in cityscaping would create a city plan that outlines areas where there were a large amounts of marginalized communities/immigrants and made it so people from those areas had less resources in those areas and had difficulty leaving
  • The Historical Politics of Racial Justice
    • The 1619 Project
      • Historical account that puts Slavery at the heat of the US economy and politics – part of a movement to develop a theory of racial capitalism
      • Black America has, in some ways, the most optimistic view of democracy
      • Huge conservative backlash against “critical race theory”
  • On Systemic Inequality
    • It is sometimes difficult to see inequality that is historical and institutionalized
    • It’s easier to see equality in individual terms (e.g. the equality vs. equity meme)
    • This makes inequality a resource question rather than a justice question
  • Racism Without Racists (Bonilla-Silva 2022 [2003])
    • Race: socially constructed but effects are real
    • Racial structure: the totality of the social relations and practices that reinforce white privilege
    • Racial ideology: the racially based frameworks used by actors to explain and justify (dominant race) or challenge (subordinate race or races) the racial status quo
    • “The ruling ideology expresses as “common sense” the interest of the dominant race” (2022, pg. 10)
  • Colour-Blind Racism
    • A racial ideology that ignores the structural/institutional foundations of racism and white privilege
    • Generally, ascribes cultural explanations for racial inequality
    • Treats racism as a historical issue (e.g. no more racists)
    • A useful theory because it: (1) challenges common sense notions of race and (2) is based on data from white people themselves
  • A New form of Racism
    • Racism after the Jim Crow era
      • Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
      • Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
      • Policing and Incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
      • Economic Inequality: Formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Four Frames of Colour-Blind Racism
  1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore
  • Legacy of Bonilla-Silva’s Theory: Desmond & Emirbayer (2009)
    • Race is socially constructed (not natural category)
      • Indigenous wasn’t a racial category until non-indigenous people came over
      • Susie Guillory Phipps and the 1/32 rule
      • South Africa - 3 racial categories; Brazil - at least 10 categories
      • Our contemporary categories are only 200 years old
      • The scientific basis of race is thin (more variation among than between “races”), but the social effects of race are vast
  • Race, Ethnicity and Nationality
    • Three overlapping symbolic categories
      • The problem of the category “Asian”
      • These categories are fluid (feeling Irish on St. Patrick’s Day, Canadian on Election Day, and Catholic on Easter)
      • People can choose to play up one category over another (African immigrants to the US teaching their Western-born children to speak with an accent)
      • Popular opinion can shape legal classifications (e.g. immigration policy)
  • Five Fallacies about Racism
  1. Individualistic Fallacy
  • Assumes Racism is about ideas, prejudices and intentionality
  • Associates racism with crime (one is guilty or not of racism)
  • Instead, racism can be normal, institutional, habitual, unintentional, commonplace, polite, implicit, and even well meaning
  1. Legalistic Fallacy
  • Equates current law with racial progress
  • No racist laws = no racism
  • Law is not a mirror of society
  • Laws don’t determine social behavior (laws against theft don’t eliminate theft)
  • Formal anti-segregation laws didn’t end segregation
  1. Tokenistic Fallacy
  • Assumes cases of individual success in politics, business or culture
  • Racism doesn’t exist because of Obama, Oprah
  • The exception proves the rule
  • Inequality still functions to exclude people from power (hence ongoing attempts to address the inequality – NFL coaches, Calls for a new VP, etc.)
  1. Ahistorical Fallacy
  • Assumes history doesn’t matter since things are better today
  • Present circumstances are unconnected to distant or even recent past
  • The present is a direct product of history
  • Everything, from the physical distribution of people in cities to family wealth to current opportunities are defined by history
  1. Fixed Fallacy
  • Assumes racism is fixed over time
  • Lynching doesn’t happen anymore so racism doesn’t exist
  • Equates racism with worst possible practices
  • Questions about whether “things are better today” have to account for how racism has changed
  • Maybe the sentiments behind lynching have just been reframed and rechanneled into a law enforcement narrative?
  • On Mass Incarceration
    • The historical myth of black criminality
      • Coates’ follow-up article on mass incarceration
    • Overall context of mass incarceration in the United States
      • 1970s - 150 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • 2007 - 767 per 100,000 were incarcerated
      • (Russia - 450 per 100,000)
    • Impact on black communities (in 2021)
      • 1,240 per 100,000 Black residents incarcerated
      • 261 per 100,000 White residents incarcerated
    • Politics of Mass Incarceration
      • Willie Horton ad I
      • The Presidential campaign of George H.W. Bush brought “dog-whistle” racism to national political advertising
      • The “tough on crime” political strategy was popular for the next two decades
      • Willie Horton ad II
        • Fed into the “broken windows” strategy
        • For-profit prisons exploited this market
        • Racialized prisoners were, in many states, stripped of basic citizenship rights
    • On Police Brutality
      • The US Dept. of Justice does not collect data on people killed by police
      • Since 2015, multiple groups have started databases of people shot and killed by police (Fatal Force Project)
    • Reflecting on Summer 2020
      • What progress towards racial justice has been made since George Floyd was murdered? What has been the backlash?
      • Are we closer to racial justice now?

Global Rights, Local Justice and Gender-Based Violence

  • Gender, Justice and Culture
    • What is gender?
    • Why is “culture” so important when thinking about gender based violence?
    • Local culture vs. universal rights?
  • Gender Trouble by Judith Butler
    • Gender is a product of “Bodily Inscriptions”
    • Bodily inscription = something written onto the body
    • In post-structuralist thinking, the body is a text
    • We “read” each other and in, turn, label each other
    • Social interaction is coded, and those codes “signify” our understanding of the world
  • The Body and Culture
    • Butler cites Mary Douglas’ book Purity and Danger (example of structuralist anthropology)
    • Douglas: societies organize themselves around moral ideas of order/disorder, purity/impurity, normal/taboo
    • Lots of taboos around bodily functions (the body as chaotic, impure and taboo)
      • The body can’t be trusted (desire and pain)
      • The body as a site of moral judgement: food prohibitions in Leviticus, sodomy laws
      • The body as profane
    • Butler: this suggests a divide between the “interior” soul and the body – but which one represents the “real person”?
    • In many societies, bodies must be disciplined to clarify the moral order
  • From Interiority to Gender Performances
    • The rules governing the interior self and the body are often gendered
    • We create cultural narratives/frameworks that link the self and the body to provide order in society (e.g. hegemonic ideals of gender and sexuality)
    • This set-up assumes we have an interior gender that naturally corresponds to bodily sex
    • E.g. Being a “man” is defined by looking a certain way and acting/feeling a certain way (manly)
  • Performing Gender
    • Since biology doesn’t do strict binaries, we feel social pressure to continually “perform”, or express gender.
    • Many people get comfortable with strict binary versions of this performance because it provides order (*key point*)
  • Undermining Gender Binaries
    • The example of Drag shows how unstable such performances can be; it’s a parody of “normal” gender
    • Does the makeup reveal or contradict the “real” interior identity?
    • Is the ability to parody gender a form of privilege? (e.g. Trans people aren’t merely “performing”)
  • Political Backlash
    • Anti-Trans legislation as an attempt to make “traditional” notions of gender a political issue
    • Why is this a popular political strategy?
    • Is this just a product of the culture of Texas?
  • Questioning Culture (Merry 2006)
    • “Cultural” conceptions of gender help to reproduce negative outcomes such as gender-based violence
    • This can be wrapped up in conceptions of family, marriage, community, inheritance and child custody
    • Does the “right” to live free of violence contradict the “right” to express one’s own cultural difference?
  • Gender and “Civilized” Culture
    • Early Anthropologists (previously “orientalists”) measured civilization in relation to Western norms
    • This approach still exists in the background of organizations working for human rights
    • Globalization has reinvigorated this approach (in some ways)
    • How do anthropologists define culture today?
    • Culture as a repertoire of ideas and actions
  • Theories of Culture and Human Rights
    • Culture as tradition (or values)
    • Culture as national essence
    • Culture as contentious
      • Ways of doing things in particular circumstances
      • Always evolving and incorporating difference
    • Culture is everywhere
      • “Human rights law is itself primarily a cultural system. Its limited enforcement mechanisms mean that the impact of human rights law is a matter of persuasion rather than force” (pg 16)
  • International Rights and Local Culture
    • International NGOs have to balance universal definitions and power relations in the international system
    • Laws need to be legitimate in national contexts
    • Often family laws aim to follow existing practices, but otherwise treat family life as “private”
    • Challenging harmful practices like GBV often means connecting with activists working to change cultural practices
  • Limits of Western Feminism(s)
    • French protests against “gender theory” (as a threat to the French Republic)
    • 2nd wave feminists privileging the category of “woman”
    • Imperialist feminism’s (colonial feminism) focus on “cultural practices”
    • Carceral feminism targeting racialized men as a threat

November 28th – The Limits of Rights

  • What have major (non-COVID) protests been about?
  • Can human rights address these concerns?
    • 2008 Global financial crisis had its roots in the expansion of neoliberalism
    • Rise in populism (e.g. 2016) was a lasting effect of anti-globalization sentiment
    • This sentiment has been exploited by authoritarian governments and nationalist movements
    • …but is a return to international norms about human rights a satisfactory answer?
  • The Rise of Neoliberalism
    • After economic crises of the 1970s, the 1980s saw a constriction of the welfare state
      • Margaret Thatcher, UK, 1979
      • Ronald Reagan, US, 1980
    • This accelerated with globalization in the 1990s
  • The Crisis of Neoliberalism?
    • Cutback the intervention of the state so that the markets can govern/reflect the rest of society
    • David Harvey The Crisis of Capitalism
      • Human frailty = “human nature”, human predation
      • Institutional failures = failing banking system
      • Obsessed with a false theory
      • Cultural origins
      • Failure of policy
      • Systemic risk → international contradictions of capital accumulation
      • The excessive finance capital → excessive power of capital
      • Overcome the problem of effective demand with credit cards
      • More debt than ever
    • With the global financial crisis of 2008 and the Occupy movement of 2010, some asked whether neoliberal theories would bring down capitalism
    • What do we mean when we talk about neoliberalism?
      • An intellectual movement concerned with economic policy?
      • A justification for stricter spending?
      • A social/cultural movement towards individualism?
  • Human Rights after the Global Recession
    • Wealth inequality is now acknowledged as a serious problem
    • Can the language of human rights address this problem?
      • In legal terms?
      • Through global civil society?
      • Through geopolitics?
  • Spade: The limitations of legal frameworks
    • The example of Trans rights:
      • Anti-discrimination laws are hard to define
      • Anti-hate crime laws are not a deterrent
    • Injustice is practiced through “administrative violence” (or, the way institutionalized rules are interpreted and enforced)
    • Neoliberalism + Administrative violence: The underfunding of necessary public institutions makes them LESS flexible and adaptive.
  • Williams: Rights are still important
    • To those who have traditionally been disempowered, rights confer “equal status
    • Williams’ housing example: for Black people in New York, informal agreements were more dangerous than formal paperwork
  • Optional Group Exercise: Working with the readings
  1. In groups, find two passages in each of the readings that demonstrate the author’s argument about the value of rights.
  2. Discuss how you might summarize these points in your notes.
  • Social Justice as the driver of human rights?
    • Example: Housing Rights
      • Is housing broken?
      • Do people have a right to housing?

Reading Quizzes – Questions and Answers

According to the author, the claim of _________ is crucial to the history of human rights.

Answer: self-evidence

For the author, a human right becomes most relevant when…?

Answer: we feel horrified by its violation

In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson lists a series of "facts" that detail…?

Answer: Injuries committed by the King of England

In the years just before the American Revolution, the American colonists started embracing the ideals of universal rights as a foundation for declaring independence. This had a great advantage over simply expanding the existing "rights of Englishmen," which would have merely led to what political outcome?

Answer: Minor reforms

The author argues that human rights emerged in the late 18th century, partly due to the rise of a political ideal of moral autonomy. Moral autonomy in this sense included what?

Answer: Reason and Independence

According to Douzinas, human rights have become an ideological justification for Western capitalism. True or False?

Answer: True

When discussing the "end of human rights" Douzinas suggests that in the post-9/11 era, even some liberal commentators have admitted that ______ trumps human rights.

Answer: Security

The author outlines 6 of the common and sometimes contradictory uses of the term "human rights." Which of the following is NOT listed among these uses?

Answer: Human rights are a clear and self-evident set of rules

In the text, the author describes negative rights as "blue" and positive rights as "red." What are negative, or "blue," rights?

Answer: Civil and political rights

What approach does Douzinas use to complicate and question the traditional linear history of human rights?

Answer: A genealogical approach

According to the author, oppression has two meanings in its traditional usage?

Answer: Tyranny and colonial domination

The Marxist idea of class is important because it helps reveal the structure of which of the five forms of oppression?

Answer: Exploitation

Defining groups as aggregates or associations are examples of what the author calls…

Answer: Methodological individualism

According to the author, theories of justice often leave out acts of violence because such theories often incorrectly assume that violence is…?

Answer: An individual act

Which of the five forms of oppression creates what W.E.B. Du Bois called "double consciousness"?

Answer: Cultural Imperialism

The Holocaust was different from historical forms of mass violence because it replaced rage and mob violence with what?

Answer: bureaucracy and obedience to authority

For Bauman (1989), without ____________ there would be no Holocaust

Answer: modern civilization

Bauman claims that, within the German bureaucracy, moral responsibility was replaced with what?

Answer: technical responsibility

According to Bauman (1989), in 1941 the Holocaust was…?

Answer: unimaginable

What occupational metaphor does Bauman use to describe the logic of "modern genocide"?

Answer: The gardener

According to Chapter 1 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are distinct from other countries in the former British empire because they are..?

Answer: settler colonies

What doctrine, which gave European powers right to indigenous lands, was partly based on the assumption that these lands were terra nullius?

Answer: The Doctrine of Discovery

According to Patzer (2014), the Supreme Court of Canada has been reluctant to characterize the residential school system as whole as wrong, and has instead focused on what?

Answer: Legally actionable cases of abuse

1. In his chapter on "Residential Harm and Colonial Dispossession," Patzer (2014) argues that we need to retrace the contours of what the colonizer called the _________, which encompassed residential schools, disempowerment, and land dispossession.

Answer: The Indian problem

Patzer (2014) argues that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in Canada is similar to the South African TRC in that it shares a ___________ ethos that may, in fact, depoliticize the process of reconciliation.

Answer: therapeutic

According to Jensen (2016), the history of human rights is defined by the coexistence of what?

Answer: Proclamation and denial

Which of the following was NOT mentioned by Jensen as a difficult issue that arose in 1948 as the language of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was debated?

Answer: Cuba's restriction of religious freedom

According to the "juridico-civil usage" of the term "rights," rights claims generate reciprocal obligations and therefore require a what?

Answer: Community

According to the author (Benhabib), one of the important points of Arendt's writing is that she draws a connection between an undermined conception of rights and the rule-of-law under totalitarianism, and what?

Answer: European colonial projects in Africa

According to the author (Benhabib), both Kant and Arendt saw that the conflict between universal human rights and _________ was the "root paradox at the heart of the territorially bounded state-centric international order."

Answer: Sovereignty claims

According to Calhoun (2003), cosmopolitanism is too often presented as simply ____________, which is free of determinate social bases and consistent with the outlooks found in global intellectual spaces such as Brussels, Davos, or even in elite universities.

Answer: Global citizenship

In response to scholars who have criticized the practicality of universal human rights, the author (Fine 2009) suggests that cosmopolitans should endeavor to create a what?

Answer: A global human rights culture

For Calhoun (2003), social solidarity is not just produced by common cultural identities resulting from racial, ethnic, or gender categories. Solidarity and the expression of shared interests also requires what?

Answer: Public discourse

According to the author (Fine 2009), the human rights revolution has suffered major reversals since what event?

Answer: The Anglo-American war on terror

Which of the following is NOT one of the four elements of Kant's "cosmopolitan point of view"

Answer: Affirming the legality of national boundaries

An essentialized understanding of culture contributed to what 1990s debate that assumed global standards of social justice were incompatible with local cultural practices?

Answer: The universalism-relativism debate

According to Merry, labeling culture as ___________ evokes an evolutionary vision of change from a primitive form to something like civilization.

Answer: Traditional

In her book Human Rights and Gender Violence, Merry (2006) warns that while human rights tend to promote ideas of individual autonomy, equality, choice and secularism, they might also contribute to what?

Answer: Cultural homogenization

The common interpretation of culture as national essence or identity comes from what historical European intellectual movement?

Answer: German romanticism

One reason violence against women is difficult to define as a human rights violation is because..?

Answer: it is often perpetrated by private citizens

Spade (2015) points out that legal efforts to ensure Trans rights have focused on anti-discrimination laws and what?

Answer: Hate crime laws

For Williams (1989), the Black desire for rights is defined by knowledge of a world without what?

Answer: Meaningful boundaries

For historically disempowered people, the conferring of rights elevates one's status to a(n) __________, according to Williams (1989)

Answer: social being

When it comes to Trans rights, discrimination law tends to take a _________ perspective that individualizes oppression and ignores systemic forms of discriminations.

Answer: Perpetrator

Williams (1989) argues that one's relationship to law is defined by one's sense of what?

Answer: Empowerment

Exam Review

Theme/Concept

Definition/Relation

Author/Week

Major themes of the Enlightenment (Hunt)

  • Human rights are natural/universal in that we know it a human right violation when we are horrified by its violation - a shared internal feeling
  • Distancing from the idea of the church/god as authority/governance in society
  • Recognition of state/nation authority
  • Promotion of science and reason rather than religion as the source of authority
  • Recognition of others as morally autonomous, self-possessive
  • Human rights exist thanks to empathy: shared/collective experience creates the social context and can alter people’s minds to reshape that social context
  • Political potential shifted the discussion from natural rights to rights of mankind/humanity
  • Torture was abolished: degrades public morals and is unworthy of the enlightened society
  • Changed the concept of honor: social distinctions became less prevalent in individualist society

Social Contract Theory

An idea, theory or model that usually, although not always, concerns the legitimacy of the authority of the state over the individual

People join together to give up some of their freedom to a sovereign authority (an entity with the right to make and enforce rules)

This is beneficial because it brings humans out of a “state of nature” - giving up some “unalienable” rights allows us to live in peace and order (Hobbes)

Hunt ‘Inventing Human Rights’, week 2

Sources of “rights” language in the

US and French revolutions

  • The Declaration of the Rights of Man
  • “Universal Rights of free men” - meaning free-born people
  • Paradoxical - how can they be “universal” if they are restricted to free men
    • Implicitly deny rights to women, slaves, etc - anyone who is not a white man
    • Also implies requiring individual moral autonomy and being self-possessive - black people, women and children didn’t comply with this image and were excluded
  • Rights of British citizens Countered by the US Declaration of Independence asserting independence from the monarchy
  • Gendered language of the declaration
  • Colonial language - exclusion of Indigenous people
  • Universal declarations were not readily embraced by leaders
    • Once people caught wind of discussion of expanding human rights, they did not want to “close that door” but rather lean into it
  • Advanced through expansions of empathy post-enlightenment regarding torture, epistolary novels exposing realities of others
  • The words of “declarations” imposes a seizure of sovereignty where rights come from the people themselves rather than a ruler
    • Also allow for the justification of governments by their guarantee of universal human rights that establish the contractual foundation for social life
  • French Declaration
    • Took inspiration from Americans asserting self-governance
    • They took it a step further by declaring all citizens are born free/equal, not just french men
    • Had a galvanizing effect on subordinated categories of people to assert their rights
  • Bill of Rights (in constitution) returned to exclusionary, citizens-only rights under the new government

Hunt ‘Inventing Human Rights’, Week 2

Paradox of human rights

  • Kant’s (Fine reading) idea of cosmopolitanism underlies framework for human rights - that all individuals deserve to be the same - this defines Western saviourism ideas
  • Hunt: how can human rights be inherent/natural if they have to be declared?
  • Multiple meanings of human rights: human rights are used as an excuse to violate human rights during a state of war on conflict. Western saviourist attitude of needing to “fix” other countries to fit Western ideas of what human rights should be, justify violence to get there
  • Western countries use human rights to justify moral superiority through humanitarianism
  • Human rights offer only paradoxes. Douzina’s theorises the ‘end of human rights’ as he claims that human rights have been overtaken by performative actions of powerful people.
  • Douzinas discusses human rights at the time the piece was written and seeks to exhibit to the reader that human rights have gone beyond ‘human rights’ and progressed to a point of being used as a political tool for governmental authority and individual desire.
    • “Does security trump human rights?”
  • Rights have become colonized, and in the west people have become spectators
  • There is a degree of separation between the west and the suffering in the rest of the world
  • Douzinas claims the paradox to be that the purported strengths of Human rights are actually the downfall

Week 3 September 26: Douzinas “The paradoxes of Human Rights”

Week 9 November 7: Fine “The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitanism”

Western humanism

Western humanism = moral education + universal potential for

salvation

Visual themes of humanitarianism

  1. Personification - Pity
  2. Humanist Care - Sympathy
  3. Massification - Repugnance
  4. Rescue - Nobleness

Limitations of the labor movement

Labour Movement: Fought for the protection of the common interests of workers.

  • Creation of Union

Problem: Exclusion of some workers in the favor of others.

  • Often anti-immigrant
  • Only sometimes focused on women’s labor
  • Racist undercurrent
    • Jim Crow and the Great Migration

Young’s definition of a social group

Young’s definition of social group and 5 types of oppression

  • Young suggests that “Justice should refer not only to distribution but also to the institutional conditions necessary for the development and exercise of individual capacities and collective communication and cooperation”(Young, 1990, p. 39).
  • This idea of justice refers primarily to two forms of injustice, those being disabling constraints, oppression, and domination.
  • The text discusses the concept of oppression and its different forms. It argues that oppression is not only the result of tyrannical rulers as it has been envisioned historically but it can also be systemic and embedded in the everyday practices of a seemingly well-meaning liberal society.
  • The author identifies five categories of oppression: exploitation, marginalization, powerlessness, cultural imperialism, and violence. Through these five forms of oppression Young challenges the mode of analyzing and evaluating social structures and practices that have been inundated with the language of liberal individualism in the United States.
  • Young hopes that this method will create a better understanding of oppression and how individuals can experience layers of different kinds of oppression resulting from their group identification. Young states that she aims to “Systematize the meaning of the concept of oppression as used by these diverse political movements, and to provide a normative argument to clarify the wrongs the term names” (Young, 1990, p. 40). Through this methodology one might be able to evaluate claims that a social group is oppressed, through the application of these five criteria Young believes that one could compare oppressions without reducing them to a common essence or claiming one is more fundamental than another (Young, 1990, p.64).
  • “Social groups are not entities that exist apart from individuals, but neither are they merely arbitrary classifications of individuals, according to attributes which are external to, or accidental to their identities. Admitting the reality of social groups does not commit one to reifying collectivities, as some might argue. Group meetings, particularly, constitute people's identities in terms of cultural forms, social situations, and history that group members know as theirs, because these meanings have been either forced upon them or forged by them or both. Groups are real not as substances but as forms of social relations” (Young, 1990, p. 44)

Young’s five types of oppression

Exploitation

  • When one group benefits at the expense of another
  • Often through economic means: can involve unfair labour wages/practices, or extraction/exploitation of resources without adequate compensation

Marginalization

  • Exclusion of certain groups from meaningful participation in social, economic, or political activities
  • Limits their opportunities and access to resources

Powerlessness

  • Lack of agency or influence a certain group experience within societal structures
  • These groups may be unable to shape decisions that affect their lives,

Cultural Imperialism

  • When a dominant culture imposes its values, beliefs, and norms on another
  • Can lead to devaluation or erasure of diverse cultural practices and identities

Violence

  • Used to maintain and reinforce systems of oppressionIncludes overt physical violence
  • To threat or use force to intimidate another group

Marion Young- Week 4 (Oct. 3)

Young, Iris Marion (1990) "Five Faces of Oppression" in Justice and the Politics of Difference. Princton, NJ: Princton University Press. Pgs. 39-65

Settler colonialism

  • “Settler colonialism” is a term used to distinguish phenomenons that are related to, but distinct from the experience of colonial empires
    • A type of colonialism in which the indigenous peoples of a colonized region are displaced by settlers who permanently form a society there
    • Historically, colonial empires exploited native populations (e.g. for labour and goods)
    • Settlers often worked to expel, assimilate or otherwise “remove” traces of the native population
    • Colonialism reproduces itself; Settler Colonialism extinguishes itself
    • Examples: the colonialism found in India v.s. Canada

October 10

Patzer (2014) - Residential School Harm and Colonial Dispossession

Politics of the TRC (does it hold the

Canadian State responsible?)

  • Product of compromise - individual lawsuits to large claim
  • ​​Offered those directly and indirectly (ex: generational trauma) affected by the legacy of Residential schools the chance to share their experiences of the relationship between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian government including physical, emotional, cultural and sexual trauma
  • Residential schools rooted in colonialism and the belief in assimilating Indigenous populations into European Christian culture.
  • Canadian gvt and state viewed Indigenous culture as inferior and sought to eliminate them
  • October 10 - Week 5
  • Final Report on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 1: Introduction (pgs. 1-6); Chapter 1 (pgs. 9-24)

The Canadian State’s understanding of

“aboriginal rights” in law

  • Aboriginal rights are recognized in the Constitution Act of 1982 through sections 35(1)(2)(3)(4), discussing the topic of treaty rights and to whom they are given. →very vague sections
  • The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) recognized Aboriginal persons' rights to self-determination, and autonomy, the right to free, prior, and informed consent, and the right not to be subjected to forced assimilation.
  • Despite their abundant Indigenous populations, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the United States initially voted against UNDRIP. Canada eventually reversed their vote in 2010.

SCC Interpretations of Indigenous Rights:

  • R. v. Sparrow (1990) – found that there is an Aboriginal right to hunt and fish. The Fisheries Act doesn’t supersede s. 35(1).
  • R. v. Van der Peet (1996) – “To be an aboriginal right an activity must be an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture of the aboriginal group claiming the right”
  • R. v. Powley (2003) – Aboriginal rights can have modern iterations AND extend to Métis people. Also introduced was the “Powley test”

Effects of the SCC approach to rights:

  • Ex: Fishing rights were guaranteed by the Peace and Friendship Treaty of 1752.
  • These rights were largely ignored until the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed them see R. v Marshall (1999)
  • Class 5: October 10th
  • Final Report on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Volume 1: Introduction (pgs. 1-6); Chapter 1 (pgs. 9-24)
  • Patzer, Jeremy (2014) “Residential School Harm and Colonial Dispossession.” In Woolford et al. (eds.) Colonial Genocide in Indigenous North America. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Pgs. 166-185

Social Conditions of European Fascism

  • Financial crisis
  • Populist anger against elites: this means that populists wanted the people to be heard but elites wanted to keep all the power to themselves
  • Appeals to Nationalism (Treaty of Versailles): these treaties held Germany responsible
    • War reparation and inflation, the political system and liberty such as freedom for speech, and relevant social movements developed nationalism which evolved into fascism.
  • Expansion of pseudo-scientific claims about race which is the idea that we should separate people by their race
  • Critiques of democracy, parliamentarianism and liberal pluralism
    • E.g. Carl Schmitt: all politics were based on the distinction between friend and enemy

Week 6

October 17th

The Holocaust as a “modern”

phenomenon

  • Certain norms and institutions made the holocaust feasible

“Without modern civilization and its most central essential achievements~ would be no Holocaust”

“we live in a type of society that made the Holocaust possible, and that contained nothing which could stop the Holocaust from happening”.

  • Therefore we must study the holocaust.

“modernity contributed to the Holocaust more directly than through its own weakness and ineptitude”

“the role of modern civilization in the incidence and the perpetration of the Holocaust was active, not passive. It suggests that the Holocaust was as much a product, as it was failure of modern civilization”

  • A product of european civilization
  • Grounded in modern logics

“political and military forces are neither counterbalanced nor restrained by resourceful and influential social ones.”

  • This changed social power and these weaknesses led to strife

What led to the upheavals:

  1. They left primal controls of order
  2. They weekend the possibility of organized action on a supra communal level (the grassroots, the level of the street)
  • The social organization of higher order fell apart
  • Communal mechanisms of social regulation all disappeared and local communities ceased to be self-sufficient and self-reliant
  • Difference between the violence which is spur of the moment
  • Emotional violence, night of smashing
  • The difference was they made a bureaucratic machinery that was meant to remove the mention
  • How do we allocate resources to do certain things, if you extract things far enough then it becomes easier to kill
  • Programs were put into place to make it distant to others, it was easier to make it not emotional

Bauman - October 17th

  • It was about the situations that led to make the holocaust feasible

Legal problems presented by the

Holocaust

​​-how bureaucracy enabled the discrimination through the administration

-admin makes it systemic far more dangerous than simple antisemitic violence because that anger goes away eventually but it is difficult to stop systemic issues

-holding the entire state accountable is very hard to do

-how does the international community hold states accountable?

-paradox of the nation-state system enforcing human rights standards

The key issues in the Nuremberg

Trials

-issues established international law to hold accountable

-genocide was not illegal so it was complicated to charge the germans

-the allies + russia were not innocent but were also not held accountable

-first time the world came together to agree on a legal matter

-trials around doctors, lawyers, and business people *note both trials

The right to have rights

  • This is the only human right according to Hannah Arendt; if we cannot agree on every single right, we can at least agree on the fact that humans have a right to have rights
  • She means that this is synonymous with the right to citizenship and the membership in a political community, the right to not be stateless (States are important because they guarantee rights)
  • Human and citizen rights are the same, or, there is no such thing as human rights but only citizen rights

Benhabib, Seyla (2004) “The Right to Have Rights: Hannah Arendt on the contradictions of the nation-state” Pgs. 49-69

&

Jensen, Steven L.B. (2016) The Making of International Human Rights. New York: Cambridge University Press. Pgs. 18-47

Week #8

Nationalism as the belief in an imagined

community

  • The idea that the nation is an imagined group of people, we have an idea of who we mean when we mention a nation (we imagine their characteristics)
  • Nationalism is creating an identity that everyone in the nation can share, it is what can join them together as a nation and create an imagined community (an ideal that is not executed in practice)
  • The concept of nationalism is outdated, which makes it exclusionary
  • Three paradoxes of nationalism:
  • It is relatively recent to historians but framed as ancient to nationalists
  • Formally universal (everyone has one) but widely exclusionary
  • Politically powerful but philosophically incoherent
  • Nationalists often see the legal state as subservient to the nation

Benhabib, Seyla (2004) “The Right to Have Rights: Hannah Arendt on the contradictions of the nation-state” Pgs. 49-69

Week #8

Decolonization and post-war Human

Rights debates

Globalization and the backlash against it

  • cosmopolitanism imagines a global order in which the idea of human rights is an operative principle of justice, with mechanisms of global governance established specifically for their protection
  • cosmopolitanism is criticized for not recognizing the unpleasant realities behind the facade of human rights or, indeed, for evading reality altogether
    • White solipsism
    • Euro-centric
  • Expansion or trade = unethical work
  • WORLD SYSTEMS THEORY
  • Cosmopolitanism
  • Globalization: in the 90s primarily, after the fall of Soviet Union, new countries were “open for business”. Free trade agreements made it easier for global corporations to expand. Global shipping telecommunications expanded, and Global institutions became important managers of this growth (IMF, World Bank, WTO).
  • World-Systems Theory: core societies dominate and exploit societies on the periphery. Periphery societies provide resources and labour. This creates a dynamic social relationship that produces profit in the core and dependency in the periphery.
  • Most visible backlash against globalization was “global terrorism”. Globalization can facilitate terrorism by making the movement of people and funds much easier. Due to faster and cheaper information and communications, the losers of globalization witness the prosperity of the winners. Radicalization ensues and exacerbates already existing cultural and religious divides (Fine 2009 reading).
  • Populism and war on terror

The Holocaust as the Defining Crisis of Western Modernity

Cosmopolitanism (and its limits)

  • Cosmopolitanism imagines a global order in which the idea of human rights is an operative principle of justice, with mechanisms of global governance established specifically for their protection
  • cosmopolitanism is criticized for not recognizing the unpleasant realities behind the facade of human rights or, indeed, for evading reality altogether
    • White solipsism
    • Euro-centric
  • Expansion or trade = unethical work
  • WORLD SYSTEMS THEORY

The Promise and Perils of Cosmopolitianism

The four frames of Color-blind racism

  • The four frames of color blind racism :
  • 1. Abstract Liberalism – things are formally equal so racism can’t exist
  • 2. Naturalization – racial phenomena are naturally (biologically) occurring
  • 3. Cultural racism – inequality is a product of cultural values
  • 4. Minimization of racism – people aren’t racist anymore

Novemeber 14: -*

.

Coates, Ta-Nehisi (2014) “The Case for Reparations” in The Atlantic (June) Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (2022) Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States (6th edition). New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Pgs. 79-103.

How the “new racism” is different from

Jim Crow laws

  • A new form of racism
  • Racism after the Jim Crow era
  1. Segregation: no longer formal, but still exists through gentrification and housing discrimination
  2. Political participation: formal equality but cultural racism against Black candidates
  3. Policing incarceration: disproportionate targeting of Black communities
  4. Economic inequality: formal exclusion now illegal, but labour market discrimination persists
  • Jim Crow laws
  1. Collection of state and local statutes that legalized racial segregation
  2. Open discrimination
  3. Characterized by visible and overt discrimination
  • New racism
  1. Operates more subtly, often embedded within social structures and institutions, and emphasized colour blind rhetoric
  2. Manifests through systemic inequalities in areas such as education, employment, housing and criminal justice
  3. Often involves symbolic racism, with biases being implicit and expressed through coded language or policies

Week 9:

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (2022) Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States (6th edition). New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Pgs. 79-103

The effects of Redlining on generational

wealth

  • Redlining: Discriminatory practice in which services (financial and otherwise) are withheld from potential customers who reside in neighborhoods classified as "hazardous" to investment; these neighborhoods have significant numbers of racial and ethnic minorities, and low-income residents
  • In terms of generational wealth, the cycle of redlining can be hard to break because if one generation is not provided with the necessary resources to live comfortably, it’s going to be hard for the future generations to gain those resources, and so on
  • This bargain was not granted to black people, who repeatedly paid a higher price for citizenship and received less in return
  • Redlining destroyed the possibility of investment wherever Black people lived
  • Not officially outlawed until 1968 by the Fair Housing Act
  • Reports of redlining by banks have continued because the damage had already been done

Week 9:

Coates, Ta-Nehisi (2014) “The Case for Reparations” in The Atlantic (June)

Gender as a performance

  • Gender as a social construct (Judith Butler)
  • There are multiple genders which exist
  • Drag queens as an example of gender performance (males dress up as females but don’t socially identify as a female)

The universal human rights vs. cultural

relativism debate (and why this is a

limited way of approaching gender justice)

  • Form of violence to try to apply universal rights to different cultures
  • Definition of universal means something different in the West and something different in the East
  • How to apply human rights in places with different cultures
  • In Work with local activist on ground

Week 21: Merry, Sally Engle (2006) Human Rights and Gender Violence: Translating International Law into Local Justice. Chicago; London: The University of Chicago Press. Pgs. 1-35

The limits of international definitions of

gender violence

The limits of international definitions of gender violence have a lot to do with the the large variety of cultures/religions that have their own views about what gender violence is. “169 states (governments) have ratified the (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women) CEDAW”

  • “Human rights law is itself primarily a cultural system.
  • Its limited enforcement mechanisms mean that the impact of human rights law is a matter of persuasion rather than force, of cultural transformation rather than coercive change.
  • Its documents create new cultural frameworks for conceptualizing social justice.
  • It is ironic that the human rights system tends to promote its new cultural vision through a critique of culture.”

CHAPTER ONE
“Introduction: Culture and Transnationalism”

Sally Engle Merry

The recent history of neoliberalism and

austerity

  • The 70s saw various economic crises
  • During this time there was more focus on healthcare and education rather than basic necessities
  • Rise of neoliberalism in the 70s, but really emerged in the 80s
  • Used as a justification for stricter spending and marked a social and cultural movement towards individualism
  • Critiques of neoliberalism include the idea that it makes it almost impossible for the non wealthy to live
  • Has resulted in the underfunding of social services which makes then less efficient - need to funded to guarantee rights
  • Saw austerity measures as a possible answer to addressing concerns that came up during the 2008 global financial crisis
  • International cooperation was rejected by many countries
  • Led to anti austerity protests such as the one in chile

The relationship between human rights

and the rise of neoliberalism

Original LGBTQ+ rights were advocated in direct opposition to the state and police. However, through budget cuts that have reduced the social safety net, LGBTQ+ members have come to rely upon the police to enforce and protect their rights. This aligns with the neoliberalism aspect of cost cutting which eventually led to LGBTQ+ people relying on the state to protect their rights.

Spade (2015) Normal Life Chapter 2

Two main legal approaches to Trans rights

Anti-discrimination laws

Anti-hate crime laws

Similarities: Both individualize hate and focuses on the individual as causes of hate rather than systemic inequalities

Issues: Anti-discrimination laws are hard to define and take a long time to be implemented. Anti-hate crime laws don’t act as deterrents to those that would commit them anyways.

Spade (2015) Normal Life Chapter 2

Why rights are still useful for marginalized

communities

Rights are important to those who have been traditionally disempowered, rights confer “equal status”

Example: Williams’ housing example: for Black people in New York, informal agreements were more dangerous than formal paperwork

“The conferring of rights is symbolic of all the denied aspects of humanity: rights imply a respect that places one in the referential range of self and others”

November 21.

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