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Call for Papers

"Human Rights in Global Perspective"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Howard University
Washington, DC (USA)
30 September - 1 October 2011

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While the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the UN
created the conditions for international mobilization of nation
states and organizations to intensify the internationalization of
human rights issues, it was not until the 1990s (post Cold War era)
that we began to witness sustained efforts by increasing number of
local human rights groups for an effective universal human rights
agenda. For several decades, the primary focus of human rights has
been limited to issues around political prisoners, torture, refugees,
and displaced persons.

Decolonization and increasing demands for democratization across the
developing world and Eastern Europe accelerated interest among local
civil society groups, activists, academics, and human rights groups
on broadening and strengthening the debate on the concept of
universal human rights to include: the rights to a living income, to
health, to food, housing and education, and to live in a world at
peace. Thus, today, across cultures around the globe, local human
rights groups are pressing demands beyond the narrow confines of
human rights definitions to include: child rights; women rights and
the elimination of female circumcision; the rights of indigenous
populations; the rights of ethnic, religious, and linguistic
minorities; the rights to shelter and development; and economic and
social justice. If human rights are not to become provincial and
limited to the mere interests of the state and its organs, human
rights dividends cannot occur through monologue, but rather through
dialogue among humans across cultures. This conference seeks to
examine contemporary human rights issues from across the world and
the effects of recent global transformations in strengthening the
discourse on human rights.

To this end, we plan to engage in a collaborative effort to present
and later publish a comprehensive volume on human rights in global
perspective. The first part of the project will be a collaborative
conference at Howard University (September 30- October 1, 2011).
Second, we will publish selected conference presentations in an
edited volume. We invite contributions that will pay particular
attention to human rights issues/struggles from across the globe, as
well as efforts by local groups especially in the developing world to
broaden the focus of human rights beyond limited perspectives and
traditional definitions. We welcome contributors from political
science, law, social work, history, sociology, African American
Studies, Africana Studies, Ethnic Studies, and other scholars of
human rights. Please email a 500-word abstract for an individual
presentation, a short curriculum vitae, including institutional
affiliation, mailing address, e-mail address (latest by December 30,
2010) to each of the collaborators below:

Dr. Michael Udo Mbanaso
E. Franklin Frazier Center for Social Work Research
Howard University
Holy Cross Hall, 3rd Floor
2900 Van Ness Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20008
USA
Tel.: +1 202 806-8101
E-Mail: [email protected]

Dr. Chima J. Korieh
Departments of History
Marquette University
P.O. Box 1881
Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881
USA
Tel.: +1 414 288-3563
Fax:  +1 414 288-5099
E-Mail: [email protected]

Selected participants will be informed by January 30, 2010.
 
 
 
 
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