Daoud Kuttab
The New Arab Censors
AMMAN – The Internet has proved to be a powerful tool for overcoming media restrictions and censorship worldwide. But new restrictions on We…
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AMMAN – The Internet has proved to be a powerful tool for overcoming media restrictions and censorship worldwide. But new restrictions on We…
PARIS – When the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was established by the United Nations Security Council 20 …
BRUSSELS – The recent abductions of Syriac Orthodox Archbishop Yohanna Ibrahim and his Greek Orthodox counterpart, Paul Yazigi, reflect not …
PARIS – “If the law supposes that,” says Mr. Bumble in Oliver Twist, “the law is a ass – a idiot.” For decades, Britain’s libel laws had bee…
PRAGUE – Two years have passed since Myanmar (Burma) held its first general election after more than two decades of military dictatorship. T…
NEW DELHI – Last December’s fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old woman in New Delhi triggered an unprecedented public outcry in India. Tens of t…
SHANGHAI – Since Xi Jinping was anointed as China’s new president, reports of official repression of dissent have hardly abated. But, while …
PARIS – According to two pro-government newspapers in Turkey, Star and Yeni Akit, as well as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan himself, th…
SEATTLE – The lives of the world’s poorest people have improved more rapidly in the last 15 years than ever before, yet I am optimistic that…
ATHENS – On Valentine’s Day, countless couples will celebrate romance by candlelight. On the same day, one billion women and men worldwide w…
Has the Iraq war fatally undermined the concept of "humanitarian intervention" aimed at stopping human rights abuses? Have the trials of Slobodan Milosevic and Charles Taylor discredited international criminal tribunals? Is universal jurisdiction legal?
For decades after WWII, human rights laws appeared moribund. They embodied the goals of civilized peoples, yet their provisions often seemed to enshrine unattainable aspirations that many governments ignored outright.
All that changed with the Cold War’s end. Thousands of organizations now document abuses, proselytize for change, deliver aid, and arouse public opinion. Amnesty International has more than a million members in 65 countries. Even China accepts that its human rights record can no longer be treated as taboo in international discussions.
Universal ideals of human rights increasingly guide, or are at least used to justify, the policies – including the military policies – of major powers. But what does this revolution mean for individuals and states? In a world of shrinking sovereignty, will aspirations for universal human rights lead to greater human dignity, or will they replicate the religious disputes of past ages, ending in clashes between competing visions of truth?
Project Syndicate’s monthly series The Human Rights Revolution gets to the heart of the issues with contributions from some of the world’s most distinguished statesmen and academics.
Contributors have included former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, former French justice minister Robert Badinter, former Polish Foreign Minister Bronislaw Geremek, noted critic David Rieff, and South Africa’s Bishop Desmond Tutu.
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