This book considers the complex and contradictory role of the United Nations when it comes to human rights around the world. It depicts the United Nations as a global arena in which state and non-state actors continuously contest issues around human rights. This ongoing contestation simultaneously produces both advances and setbacks when it comes to the rights of stateless populations, women, Indigenous peoples, and racialized people, as well as rights related to health and the environment.
Since the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and throughout various subsequent expansions, conventions and declarations, the United Nations has been central to the development and advancement of human rights as a primary, stated goal of global governance. However, there are various inherent contradictory tensions and challenges embedded in the United Nations promise for human rights. This timely collection investigates the United Nations role as knowledge producer, its relation to non-state actors, and the United Nations role as a system for grouping sovereign states, where there is uneven buy-in within non-binding agreements and tensions between national sovereignty and human rights. At a time when the world faces existential challenges from climate change to pandemics which disproportionately impact the worlds most vulnerable populations, this book addresses future challenges and possibilities for the United Nations.
Human Rights and the United Nations: Paradox and Promise will be an important read for researchers and students across the fields of human rights, political science, international relations, and global development, as well as for United Nations and governmental policy analysts and advisors.
This book considers the complex and contradictory role of the United Nations when it comes to human rights around the world. It depicts the United Nations as a global arena in which state and non-state actors continuously contest issues around human rights.
Introduction: Thinking About the Paradox and Promise of Human Rights and
the United Nations Abigail B. Bakan and Yasmeen Abu-Laban Part 1: The United
Nations as Knowledge Producer
1. Knowledge Production: Gender, Race,
Indigenous Peoples and Politics and the UN Abigail B. Bakan and Yasmeen
Abu-Laban
2. Towards Reproductive Justice in the Global Gender Equality
Agenda: The UN and Canadass Compliance and Non-Compliance with Beijing and
Beyond Nariya Khasanova
3. Human Rights for Human Remains: How International
Frameworks Facilitate Transnational Knowledge Production Nicole Anderson Part
2: Stateless and Non-State Actors
4. Statelessness as a Window on the Paradox
of the United Nations Yasmeen Abu-Laban and Abigail B. Bakan
5. The Paradox
of Visibility and the ILOs Decent Work for Domestic Workers Convention Annie
Chau
6. The Paradox of Indigenous Peoples Participation at the UN: The Dance
of Meaningful Change Against State Sovereignty and Territorial Integrity
Sheryl Lightfoot and Utkarsh Khare Part 3: Global Challenges and Sovereign
States
7. The UNs Contradictory Impact and Failure to Protect Women in
Humanitarian Settings: Racist Frames in Post-Earthquake Haiti Célia Romulus
8. Mandating Global Health to Foster Health Security: Spotlighting the Africa
Health Strategy (2007-30) and the United Nations Christopher Isike
9. Will a
Human Right to a Clean, Healthy and Sustainable Environment Address the
Wrongs of Environmental Degradation? Karen Morrow
10. The UN Human Rights
Paradox During the Interregnum: Yemen and Myanmar as Case Studies W. Andy
Knight Afterword: Naming and Framing Paradox Yasmeen Abu-Laban and Abigail B.
Bakan
Abigail B. Bakan is Professor in the Department of Social Justice Education, OISE, cross-appointed to the Department of Political Science, and affiliate with the Anne Tanenbaum Centre for Jewish Studies, at the University of Toronto. Her research is in the area of anti-oppression politics, with a focus on intersections of gender, race, class, political economy, and citizenship. Her publications include Theorizing Anti-Racism: Linkages in Marxism and Critical Race Theories (co-edited with Enakshi Dua); and Israel, Palestine and the Politics of Race: Exploring Identity and Power in a Global Context (co-authored with Yasmeen Abu-Laban).
Yasmeen Abu-Laban is Professor of Political Science and Canada Research Chair in the Politics of Citizenship and Human Rights at the University of Alberta. She is also a fellow at the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. She is co-author (with Abigail B. Bakan) of Israel, Palestine and the Politics of Race: Exploring Identity and Power in a Global Context (2020).