If you had taken some of my other history courses, then you would have noted the prominence given to the issue of human rights in both HIS 112 (History of World Civilization II) and HIS 102 (History of Western Civilization II). In HIS 112 my week 13 assignment, which used to be the final exam essay, is now: Read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (along with the document background notes and the study questions) and answer the following question in a paragraph: In HIS 102, I also focus on human rights in a similar manner. This time on the final exam: The essay question for the HIS 102 final exam, approximately two-three pages in length, that you will write in the testing lab, is as follows: The reason for essentially ending both courses with an examination of human rights in the contemporary world was to show the "culmination" of the historical development of a conception of human rights that really first emerged at the end of the seventeenth century with the work of John Locke. That realization of that conception is still, however, a work in progress three centuries later. ps. Human Rights also appear in some of the assignments in HIS 135, particularly with my second short paragraph assignment, and also in my remarks on democratization. I found it difficult to find specific images to include in these remarks on human rights. I finally settled on these two immediately below. Eleanor
Roosevelt, 1884-1962, with the Spanish text of the Universal
Declaration in 1949, is quoted as saying about the UN Declaration of
Rights, "It is not a treaty...[In the future, it] may well become the international Magna Carta."
The Original Geneva Convention from 1864. Is there anything more illogical than the combination of the protection of human rights and the actions of war as expressed in the Geneva Conventions? There is a continuing struggle in the world to counter prejudices of race and colour and religion and gender and class and age. Indeed, equality and the unfettered enjoyment of human rights have proven to be elusive concepts. The scale of prejudice can run from outright murder to a more subtle forms, such as parking restrictions at a small church. The struggle goes on everywhere around the world, not just in Sudan or Rwanda-Burundi but also in the United States; not just in Pakistan but also in Germany; not just Myanmar (aka Burma) but also Russia; not just Cuba but also the United Kingdom. At one time when I taught the HIS 135 course on campus, I focused on the struggle for human rights in rather broad terms (I did not cover each area equally.) as: 1. Waged by Race 2. Waged by Women
One of the pioneers in the movement for women's rights was Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986), a French existentialist who is often considered the founder of modern feminism. Her book La Deuxième Sexe (The Second Sex, 1949) enjoyed a huge success. In it she analyzed why women have second-rate status and no legal equality. Beauvoir later advocated that feminists must be against any inequality of class, race, religion or gender. It still remains especially dangerous for women to be involved in the political process throughout the world today--witness the 2007 events in Pakistan. There have been very, very few chiefs-of-state (none in the United States, one in Great Britain, one in Germany, none in Russia, none in China, etc). 3. Waged by Class
4. Waged by Youth
3. Waged by the Aged
I'm sure that you could come up with some others areas involving aspects of human rights. Take a few moments when you have the chance to consider the status of human rights around the world There are many international organizations that focus on the protection of human rights. Two of the major non-governmental organizations are Amnesty International (founded in 1961 by Peter Benenson, an English lawyer, with chapters in over forty countries) and the Human Rights Watch (started in 1978 as the Helsinki Watch group to monitor compliance of the Soviet bloc with the provisions of the Helsinki Accords). But take a look at the long list of human rights groups compiled by the University of Minnesota's Human Rights Library, NGO Links. I found that just the length of this list itself clearly symbolized the enormity of the problem of securing human rights for everyone. Of course the United Nations is also involved with human rights, especially the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. See also the UN resource page on Human Rights. Well, now that I've written all this, what about a definition of human rights? Here are some sources to look at:
After I wrote these remarks, it occurred to me that some of you might wonder why Human Rights and Democratization appear as two distinct subjects in my course on contemporary history. Does one have to accompany the other, or can you have one without the other? Something for you to think about. HIS 135 web pages relevant to human rights Some suggestions for further research
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