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Cultural Transformation and Human Rights in Africa (Paperback, Revised And The Ed.)
Loot Price: R1,426
Discovery Miles 14 260
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Cultural Transformation and Human Rights in Africa (Paperback, Revised And The Ed.)
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Total price: R1,436
Discovery Miles: 14 360
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The authors of this volume seek to contribute to the clarification
of the very difficult conceptual and practical questions
surrounding the legitimization and permanent protection of human
rights in non-Western cultural contexts, specifically in this case
Africa. The contributors try to clarify thinking about what ought
to constitute human rights in an African context as well as
strategies for realizing them within communities and countries.
These issues are particularly contentious when the specific point
at issue is the promotion and protection of economic, social and
cultural rights, and even more so in relation to the rights of
women. The underlying premise is that there are possibilities for
the local promotion of what ought to be universal human rights
through processes of cultural transformation over time. While
conceding the difficulties and constraints of the relationship
between local cultures and the notion of the universality of human
rights, the contributors believe that it is both necessary and
possible to address these issues by making use of creative
possibilities within specific countries. Several of the
contributors explore these questions of cultural transformation and
human rights generally. The African Charter of Human and People's
Rights is examined to see if there is a case for recognizing a
specifically African cultural contribution to conceptualizations of
human rights which have been originally formulated in a European
social context. The volume then proceeds to translate the general
issues at stake into the particular question of women's rights -
especially their ability to own, control and have access to land
and other property rights. This thoughtful set of explorations by
African scholars and human rights activists adds significantly to
our understanding of the complex relationships that exist between
culture, religion, law and human rights.
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