- Stephen Hopgood, Jack Snyder & Leslie Vinjamuri, Introduction: human rights: past, present and future
- Geoffrey Dancy & Kathryn Sikkink, Human rights data, processes, and outcomes: how recent research points to a better future
- Beth A. Simmons & Anton Strezhnev, Human rights and human welfare: looking for a 'dark side' to international human rights law
- Jack Snyder, Empowering rights through mass movements, religion, and reform parties
- Leslie Vinjamuri, Human rights backlash
- Thomas Risse, Human rights in areas of limited statehood: from the spiral model to localization and translation
- Alexander Cooley & Matthew Schaaf, Grounding the backlash: regional security treaties, counternorms and human rights in Eurasia
- Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Governing religion as right
- Sally Engle Merry & Peggy Levitt, The vernacularization of women's human rights
- Shareen Hertel, Re-framing human rights advocacy: the rise of economic rights
- Samuel Moyn, Human rights and the crisis of liberalism
- Stephen Hopgood, Human rights on the road to nowhere
- Stephen Hopgood, Jack Snyder & Leslie Vinjamuri, Conclusion: human rights futures
Friday, September 8, 2017
Hopgood, Snyder, & Vinjamuri: Human Rights Futures
Stephen Hopgood (School of Oriental and African Studies, Univ. of London - Politics and Internatioanl Studies), Jack Snyder (Columbia Univ. - Political Science), & Leslie Vinjamuri (School of Oriental and African Studies, Univ. of London - Politics and International Studies) have published Human Rights Futures (Cambridge Univ. Press 2017). Contents include: