scholarly journals Son Preference – A Violation of Women’s Human Rights: A Case Study of Igbo Custom in Nigeria

2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ine Nnadi
Author(s):  
Geraldine Moane

This chapter considers how social psychological perspectives from feminist and liberation psychologies can enhance understandings of human rights activism, using three examples from the Irish context: abortion, poverty, and sexual orientation. The gap between institutional/state structures and grassroots community groups is apparent from the case of abortion and the use of the human rights framework in an Irish context. Possibilities for bridging this gap and for expanded understandings of human rights are considered. Firstly, Links are made between women’s human rights and structures of oppression through examples from community-based education with women living in impoverished communities. Secondly, A case study of community activism involving women from a deprived community demonstrates how a micro-level or bottom-up understanding of social change can be integrated with human rights. Thirdly, The example of LGBT women points to the need to expand individualistic concepts of personhood that underpin human rights to include relational and collective psychological processes.


2002 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 285-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annelise Riles

This essay traces the relationship between activists and academics involved in the campaign for “women's rights as human rights” as a case study of the relationship between different classes of what I call “knowledge professionals” self-consciously acting in a transnational domain. The puzzle that animates this essay is the following: how was it that at the very moment at which a critique of “rights” and a reimagination of rights as “rights talk” proved to be such fertile ground for academic scholarship did the same “rights” prove to be an equally fertile ground for activist networking and lobbying activities? The paper answers this question with respect to the work of self-reflexivity in creating a “virtual sociality of rights.”


2010 ◽  
pp. 157-176
Author(s):  
Adriana Carmona López ◽  
Alma Gómez Caballero ◽  
Lucha Castro Rodríguez

Water is Life ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 457-506
Author(s):  
Barbara van Koppen ◽  
Bill Derman ◽  
Barbara Schreiner ◽  
Ebenezer Durojaye ◽  
Ngcime Mweso

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