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Human Rights, Security Politics and Embodiment
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05 December 2023

Virtuous institutions, such as human rights ones, have been neglected by securitization theory’s focus on the national state apparatus as the key driver of security politics. This book challenges this assumption, showing the ways institutional human rights, deemed the most progressive of rights, have been complicit in rendering the body vulnerable. While the book principally focuses on the treatment of the veiled woman, it also considers wider cases involving torture: the ultimate removal of control over one’s body and biggest transgression of human rights’ supposed foundational commitment to bodily integrity.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Human rights, civil rights, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Social Theory, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, Sociology, Social theory
This is a seminal, ground-breaking, and compelling study that is especially and unreservedly recommended for personal, professional, community, and college/university library collections. -- Midwest
Aneira J. Edmunds is an authority on human rights. She tackles controversial and topical issues relating in particular to human rights’ control over the woman’s body and the limitations of ‘virtuous’ institutions such as the ICC and the ECtHR.
Acknowledgements; Introduction: An Outline; 1. Sociology, Human Rights and the Body; 2. Securing Undesirable Bodies; 3. Virtuous Institutions and the Securitisation of Women’s Bodies; 4. The Conditionality of Human Rights; Conclusion: Desecuritising Human Rights; Bibliography; Index