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Institutions--like education, family, medicine, culture, and law--,
are powerful social structures shaping how we live together. As
members of society we daily express our adherence to norms and
values of institutions as we consciously and unconsciously reject
and challenge them. Our everyday experiences with institutions not
only shape our connections with one another, they can reinforce our
binding to the status quo as we struggle to produce social change.
Institutions can help us do human rights. Institutions that bridge
nation-states can offer resources, including norms, to advance
human rights. These institutions can serve as touch stones to
changing minds and confronting human rights violations.
Institutions can also prevent us from doing human rights. We create
institutions, but institutions can be difficult to change.
Institutions can weaken, if not outright prevent, human rights
establishment and implementation. To release human rights from
their institutional bindings, sociologists must solve riddles of
how institutions work and determine social life. This book is a
step forward in identifying means by which we can loosen human
rights from institutional constraints.
Independent children's rights institutions (ICRIs) have been
established across the world. Endorsed by the UN, they are
independent of their governments and endowed with legal powers. Yet
we know little about how ICRIs function. How do they work? What
impacts their success? What objectives do ICRIs seek to achieve?
The contributors to this edited collection provide first-hand
experiences in directing, working for, and studying ICRIs and
detail their unique, in-depth accounts of factors shaping ICRIs'
efforts to monitor and advance children's rights. Chapters examine
ICRIs in Belgium, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands,
Pakistan, and the United States, as well as an extraordinary
network of ICRIs, and introduce innovative ideas of how to think
about ICRIs' independence and legal powers. Offering perspectives
from across the world, this volume provides both theoretical and
practical insights on a crucial element of children's rights,
independent children's rights institutions. The Roles of
Independent Children's Rights Institutions in Advancing Human
Rights of Children is essential reading for students, researchers,
and scholars interested in studies of sociology of childhood, law
and society, children's rights, and human rights.
As the influence of sociologists and sociological insights has
greater impacts on human rights scholarship, so do key sociological
concerns with groups, collective identity, social inequality, and
collective action. The global struggle for human rights has been,
fundamentally, a struggle by oppressed groups against the
structures of their oppression. As such, sociological work into the
experiences of women, racial and ethnic minorities, children, LGBTQ
communities, the mentally ill, and others helps us understand the
promises and challenges of pursuing human rights. This book
presents the fundamental insights gleaned from the scholarship on
groups in society for the study of, understanding of, and,
ultimately, realization of human rights."
As sociologists deepen their examinations of human rights in their
teaching, research, and thinking, it is essential that such work is
conducted in a manner that is both mindful and critical of the
knowledge we are building upon in sociology and human rights. As
the authors of this volume reveal, creating sociological knowledge
that examines human rights for the expansion of human rights is
something that sociologists are well equipped to undertake, whether
through the use of mathematics, comparative-historical analysis,
the study of emotions, conversations, or social psychology. In
these chapters you will find the roots of the study of human rights
deep within sociological research and thinking as well as emerging
techniques that will push the discipline as it seeks to expand
understanding of human rights together with so many other aspects
of the social condition.
How do people work together to advance human rights? Do people form
groups to prevent human rights from being enforced? Why? In what
ways do circumstances matter to the work of individuals
collectively working to shape human rights practices? Human society
is made of individuals within contexts-tectonic plates not of the
earth's crust but of groups and individuals who scrape and shift as
we bump along, competing for scarce resources and getting along.
These movements, large and small, are the products of actions
individuals take in communities, within families and legal
structures. These individuals are able to live longer, yet continue
to remain vulnerable to dangers arising from the environment,
substances, struggles for power, and a failure to understand that
in most ways we are the same as our neighbors. Yet it is because we
live together in layers of diverse communities that we want our
ability to speak to be unhindered by others, use spirituality to
help us understand ourselves and others, possess a space and
objects that are ours alone, and join with groups that share our
values and interests, including circumstances where we do not know
who our fellow neighbor is. For this reason sociologists have
identified the importance of movements and change in human
societies. When we collaborate in groups, individuals can change
the contours of their daily lives. Within this book you will find
the building blocks for human rights in our communities. To
understand why sometimes we enjoy human rights and other times we
experience vulnerability and risk, sociologists seek to understand
the individual within her context. Bringing together prominent
sociologists to grapple with these questions, Movements for Human
Rights: Locally and Globally, offers insights into the ways that
people move for (and against) human rights.
How do people work together to advance human rights? Do people form
groups to prevent human rights from being enforced? Why? In what
ways do circumstances matter to the work of individuals
collectively working to shape human rights practices? Human society
is made of individuals within contexts-tectonic plates not of the
earth's crust but of groups and individuals who scrape and shift as
we bump along, competing for scarce resources and getting along.
These movements, large and small, are the products of actions
individuals take in communities, within families and legal
structures. These individuals are able to live longer, yet continue
to remain vulnerable to dangers arising from the environment,
substances, struggles for power, and a failure to understand that
in most ways we are the same as our neighbors. Yet it is because we
live together in layers of diverse communities that we want our
ability to speak to be unhindered by others, use spirituality to
help us understand ourselves and others, possess a space and
objects that are ours alone, and join with groups that share our
values and interests, including circumstances where we do not know
who our fellow neighbor is. For this reason sociologists have
identified the importance of movements and change in human
societies. When we collaborate in groups, individuals can change
the contours of their daily lives. Within this book you will find
the building blocks for human rights in our communities. To
understand why sometimes we enjoy human rights and other times we
experience vulnerability and risk, sociologists seek to understand
the individual within her context. Bringing together prominent
sociologists to grapple with these questions, Movements for Human
Rights: Locally and Globally, offers insights into the ways that
people move for (and against) human rights.
Institutions--like education, family, medicine, culture, and law--,
are powerful social structures shaping how we live together. As
members of society we daily express our adherence to norms and
values of institutions as we consciously and unconsciously reject
and challenge them. Our everyday experiences with institutions not
only shape our connections with one another, they can reinforce our
binding to the status quo as we struggle to produce social change.
Institutions can help us do human rights. Institutions that bridge
nation-states can offer resources, including norms, to advance
human rights. These institutions can serve as touch stones to
changing minds and confronting human rights violations.
Institutions can also prevent us from doing human rights. We create
institutions, but institutions can be difficult to change.
Institutions can weaken, if not outright prevent, human rights
establishment and implementation. To release human rights from
their institutional bindings, sociologists must solve riddles of
how institutions work and determine social life. This book is a
step forward in identifying means by which we can loosen human
rights from institutional constraints.
First Published in 2016. The global struggle for human rights has
been, fundamentally, a struggle by oppressed groups against the
structures of their oppression. As such, sociological work into the
experiences of women, racial and ethnic minorities, children, LGBTQ
communities, the mentally ill, and others helps us understand the
promises and challenges of pursuing human rights. This book
presents the fundamental insights gleaned from the scholarship on
groups in society for the study of, understanding of, and,
ultimately, realization of human rights.
As sociologists deepen their examinations of human rights in their
teaching, research, and thinking, it is essential that such work is
conducted in a manner that is both mindful and critical of the
knowledge we are building upon in sociology and human rights. As
the authors of this volume reveal, creating sociological knowledge
that examines human rights for the expansion of human rights is
something that sociologists are well equipped to undertake, whether
through the use of mathematics, comparative-historical analysis,
the study of emotions, conversations, or social psychology. In
these chapters you will find the roots of the study of human rights
deep within sociological research and thinking as well as emerging
techniques that will push the discipline as it seeks to expand
understanding of human rights together with so many other aspects
of the social condition.
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