
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Human Rights (Vol. 21, no. 7, 2017) is out. Contents include:
- Eliza Watt, ‘The right to privacy and the future of mass surveillance’
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Sarah Combellick-Bidney, Reproductive rights as human rights: stories from advocates in Brazil, India and South Africa
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Shabnam Moinipour, Refugees against refugees: the Iranian Migrants’ perception of the human rights of Afghans in Iran
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Louise E. Wise, Social death and the loss of a ‘world’: an anatomy of genocidal harm in Sudan
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Ron Dudai, Entryism, mimicry and victimhood work: the adoption of human rights discourse by right-wing groups in Israel
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Julia Chaitin, Shoshana Steinberg & Sharon Steinberg, ‘BDS – it’s complicated’: Israeli, Jewish, and others’ views on the boycott of Israel
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Mona Paré & Tate Chong, Human rights violations and Canadian mining companies: exploring access to justice in relation to
children’s rights
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Elif Celik, The role of CRPD in rethinking the subject of human rights
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Paul Gready & Simon Robins, Rethinking civil society and transitional justice: lessons from social movements and ‘new’ civil society
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Sharifah Rahma Sekalala, Who gets to sit at the table? Interrogating the failure of participatory approaches within a right to health framework
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Aliraza Javaid, Moving through shadows: police, policing and male rape