Protest against cuts: 20 Wednesday 2010

October 20: Protest Against the Cuts at Downing Street 6pm

From the Coalition of Resitance:

Stop the Con-Dem cuts! Build the Resistance! Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay!

Speakers include Tony Benn, Caroline Lucas MP, Rev Jesse Jackson, Jeremy Dear (NUJ), Dot Gibson (IHOOPS), Lee Jasper (BARAC), Zita Holbourne (BARAC) John McDonnell MP, Mark Serwotka (PCS), Jeremy Corbyn MP, Bob Crow (RMT), Aaron Porter (NUS)

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Conference: Humanism in Agonistic Perspective

A promising theme and line-up (possibly including one of our “Authors of Disorder”):

Humanism in Agonistic Perspective: Themes from the work of Bonnie Honig

April 18-20th 2011, University of Nottingham

Note: as a general rule we will keep conference postings to a minimum, only highlighting events we are particularly interested in – usually meaning one or more of us are attending, participating in or running the event.

The experience of being a woman in academia…

I’ve obviously got no direct personal experience, but have had a number of conversations with female and male colleagues about it. And now there’s a blog dedicated to compiling the experiences of women in philosophy departments, which may be of interest to those in other disciplines.

“What is it like to be a woman in philosophy”

On science and universal values

Sam Harris gives a Ted Talk consoling “people like us” with the good news that science will provide universal standards of right and wrong, good and evil. Thank you, Science! All those pesky relativist and fanatical religious type can now be put in their place.


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New Scholarship on Human Rights

Human rights in politics and academia is ubiquitous and the literature on it ever-expanding. Yet much of what I hear and read is much of a piece, which is why I thought it would be interesting to highlight three (relatively) recent books that, I think, are developing the most interesting studies and new understandings of human rights. The texts don’t represent a cohesive agenda but rather reveal lines of connection through three (at least) different disciplines – and as I suggest below, collectively they contribute to an important and emerging way of rethinking human rights, particularly for those who are critical of the role human rights play in justifying the actions of powerful states and coercive interventions.

The Practice of Human Rights: Tracking Law Between the Global and the Local, edited by Mark Goodale & Sally Engle  Merry (Cambridge University Press, 2007)

Human Rights and Social Movements, by Neil Stammers (Pluto Press, 2009)

Silencing Human Rights: Critical Engagements with a Contested Project, edited by Gurminder K. Bhambra & Robbie Shilliam (Palgrave, 2009)

My own research on human rights is in global ethics and international political theory, but I have found myself increasing dissatisfied with the account of human rights as a political practice offered in many contemporary works. Within philosophy and political theory, empirically grounded human rights research is particularly lacking, but even within political science and international law there is a dearth of good critical work based in historical or contemporary analysis of how human rights are actually put to use. Continue reading