03955oam 2200529I 450 991081663170332120230126214821.090-04-31552-710.1163/9789004315525(CKB)3710000000932863(MiAaPQ)EBC4734078 2016031126(nllekb)BRILL9789004315525(EXLCZ)99371000000093286320160705d2017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierHuman rights and dynamic humanism /Winston P. Nagan, John A.C. Cartner, Robert J. MunroLeiden ;Boston :Brill,[2017]1 online resource (1,025 pages)Includes index.90-04-20265-X Preliminary Material -- Introduction: An Alternative Perspective on Human Rights -- The Perspective of Dynamic Humanism -- Religious Values, Normative Precepts and Human Rights -- Human Rights Trends in the Western History of Ideas -- Ideological Contributions of Celtic Freedom and Individualism to Human Rights -- Dynamic Humanism and the Human Rights Struggle -- Globalization, Dynamic Humanism and Human Rights Activism -- Emotion: Love, Hate, and the Human Rights’ Boundaries of the Law -- Slavery, Tolerated Exploitation and Human Trafficking -- Contextualizing Genocide, Apartheid, Racism, Mass Murder -- Contextualizing Torture -- Toward an Affection Process of Human Rights -- Family, Gender, Sexual Orientation, Human Rights and the Affection Process -- Human Rights and Socio-Economic Justice -- Intellectual Property and Human Rights -- Truth, Reconciliation and the Fragility of Heroic Activism -- Transitional Justice: The Moral Foundations of Trials and Commissions in Social and Political Transformation -- Peace, Justice and Transition in Colombia -- Human Rights, Eco-Community Survival, Bio-Piracy and Indigenous Peoples -- Human Rights and Nuclear Weapons -- The Development of Human Rights and Private Sector Enforcement: The United States Experience -- Conclusions: Moving Ahead -- Index.This book emphasizes a forgotten aspect of human rights, id est, to establish that human rights captures its meaning from human activism and advocacy. It explores factors which drive the advocacy of human rights integrating religious values reflected in human rights law. The book explores human rights activism in the history of ideas and the contributions of Celtic culture. It develops the framework for understanding the human rights struggle and the advocacy functions which drive it, exploring the critical role of emotion in the form of sentiment, either positive or negative, that promotes or prevents human rights violations. The negative sentiment chapter explores the major forms of human rights violations. Positive sentiment explores the role of affect, empathy and human solidarity in the promotion of the culture of human rights. Further chapters explore affect, gender, and sexual orientation, human rights and socio-economic justice, human rights and revolution, transitional justice, indigenous human rights, nuclear weapons and intellectual property.Human rightsHuman rightsReligious aspectsHuman rightsSocial aspectsHuman rightsEconomic aspectsTransitional justiceHuman rights.Human rightsReligious aspects.Human rightsSocial aspects.Human rightsEconomic aspects.Transitional justice.323Nagan Winston P1690121Cartner John A. C975961Munro Robert John1690122NL-LeKBNL-LeKBBOOK9910816631703321Human rights and dynamic humanism4065660UNINA