The cultural politics of human rights and neoliberalism
Do human rights offer the potential to challenge neo-liberalism? I argue that rather than understanding human rights as ideology, as obscuring or legitimating neo-liberalism, it is more productive to see both human rights and neo-liberalism as hegemonic projects. In this article I explore convergences and divergences between dominant discourses and practices of human rights and neo-liberalism around key ideas ‘the state’, ‘the individual’ and ‘the nation’, to clear a space for appreciation of the cultural politics of human rights: divergences in constructions of responsibility and hierarchies of value of concrete individuals offer openings for challenging ideas and practices of neo-liberalism through campaigns for human rights.
Item Type | Article |
---|---|
Keywords | ideology, hegemony, socialism, social democracy, state, cosmopolitan, individual |
Departments, Centres and Research Units | Sociology > Unit for Global Justice (UGJ) |
Date Deposited | 12 Jun 2019 08:37 |
Last Modified | 15 Jun 2021 00:14 |