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The Conservative Human Rights Revolution - European Identity, Transnational Politics, and the Origins of the European Convention (Hardcover)
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The Conservative Human Rights Revolution - European Identity, Transnational Politics, and the Origins of the European Convention (Hardcover)
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The Conservative Human Rights Revolution radically reinterprets the
origins of the European human rights system, arguing that its
conservative inventors envisioned the European Convention on Human
Rights (ECHR) not only as an instrument to contain communism and
fascism in continental Europe, but also to allow them to pursue a
controversial political agenda at home and abroad. Just as the
Supreme Court of the United States had sought to overturn Franklin
Roosevelt's New Deal, a European Court of Human Rights was meant to
constrain the ability of democratically elected governments to
implement left-wing policies that conservatives believed violated
their basic liberties, above all in Britain and France. Human
rights were also evoked in the service of reviving a romantic
Christian vision of European identity, one that contrasted sharply
with the modernizing projects of technocrats such as Jean Monnet.
Rather than follow the model of the United Nations, conservatives
such as Winston Churchill grounded their appeals for new human
rights safeguards in an older understanding of European
civilization. All told, these efforts served as a basis for
reconciliation between Germany and the rest of Europe, while
justifying the exclusion of communists and colonized peoples from
the ambit of European human rights law. Marco Duranti illuminates
the history of internationalism and international law - from the
peace conferences and world's fairs of the early twentieth century
to the grand pan-European congresses of the postwar period - and
elucidates Churchill's Europeanism, as well as his critical
contribution to the genesis of the ECHR. Drawing on previously
unpublished material from twenty archives in six countries, The
Conservative Human Rights Revolution revisits the ethical
foundations of European integration after WWII and offers a new
perspective on the crisis in which the European Union finds itself
today.
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