Concrete Utopia

Concrete Utopia? conceptualizes the human rights project of the last two and a half centuries as a “backward-looking” endeavor, which, in order to move forward, must return to the utopian roots of its foundational documents.? Human rights?advance by judging the ills of?the present world from a standpoint?in the future where?they?might?no longer exist—a fundamentally utopian gesture.?This peculiar character of human rights makes them continually ripe for reinvention and for responding to changing world circumstances.?Looking at topics such as the Auschwitz trials in Frankfurt in the mid-1960s, public outrage to the Vietnam War, the US civil rights movement and the founding of Amnesty International in 1961, this book surveys the history of human rights and?how they have been?reconceived at different points in time.?It closes by sketching?the way they may?be?re-envisioned for new struggles?in the 21st century. At a time?when?the human rights project has endured criticism?for being toothless or?even?for?providing a pretext for military?invasions, Kaleck argues that the current global crises, from inequality, to ecological collapse and the?“age of pandemics,”?can be?countered?by?reinventing?human rights?work?through feminist, decolonial and ecological?interventions.

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