
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Human Rights (Vol. 28, nos. 8-9, 2024) is out. Contents include:
- After Rights? Politics, Ethics, Aesthetics
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Louiza Odysseos & Bal Sokhi-Bulley, After rights? Politics, ethics, aesthetics: an introduction
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Quỳnh N. Phạm, Nông dân being wronged: fighting for the world in a place
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Louiza Odysseos, After rights, after Man? Sylvia Wynter, sociopoetic struggle and the ‘undared shape’
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Marie Petersmann, In the break (of rights and representation): sociality beyond the non/human subject
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Taylor Borowetz, After property? The Haitian Revolution, racial capitalism, and the foundation for a universal right to freedom from enslavement
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Kate Seear & Sean Mulcahy, Forging new habits: critical drugs scholarship as an otherwise to rights
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Karen Zivi, Reason enough to hope? The citational practices and disorienting subjects that make menstruation a matter of human rights
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Illan rua Wall, The right to protest
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Shaimaa Abdelkarim, Space-making ‘after rights’: carcerality, rights-claims, and the practice of freedom
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Kay Lalor, Refusing the present to affirm the unknown future: after LGBTIQ rights in global queer politics
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Andrew Schaap, The after rights of the Citizen of the UK and its Colonies: who is the subject of the rights of the citizen in Britain’s hostile environment?
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Bal Sokhi-Bulley, ‘After rights’ is friendship: on abandonment, obligation and the stranger
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Sumi Madhok, Anti-imperial epistemic justice and re-making rights and justice ‘after rights’
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Josh Bowsher, After truth, after shame … after information politics? Rethinking the epistemologies of human rights in the digital-authoritarian conjuncture
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Samantha Pinto, After choice, after justice?: race, reproduction, and the uncertain futures of feminist political desire
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Lola Frost, The work of art, beside and beyond rights