Studying Human Rights
By Todd Landman
Published December 22nd 2005 by Routledge – 182 pages
This book draws on key theories and methods from the social sciences to develop a framework for the systematic study of human rights problems. It argues that solid empirical analysis of human rights problems rests on examining the observable practices from state and non-state actors that constitute human rights violations to provide plausible explanations for their occurrence and provide deeper understanding of their meaning.
Such explanations and understanding draws on the theoretical insights from rational, structural and cultural approaches in the social sciences. This book includes:
Studying Human Rights is the first book to use the synthesis of social sciences approaches to studying human rights and its quantitative and qualitative approach provides useful insights. This book makes a unique contribution to the existent literature on human rights and is an invaluable tool for both scholars and practitioners of this area.
‘A faultless exposition of the quantitative approach to human rights inquiry…will be essential reading for those engaged in this field…it is difficult to see how this book could be improved.’ - International Affairs
'The Landmand project is serious, well-argued and challenging; it also contains a promise for a new branch or application of social science, which may produce firm results in the political sociology of human rights practices.' - Zenon Stavrinides, The Philosopher
1. Scope of Human Rights 2. The Terrain of Human Rights 3. Social Theory and Human Rights 4. Social Science Methods and Human Rights 5. Measuring Human Rights 6. Global Comparative Studies 7. The Social Science of Truth Commissions 8. Human Rights Impact Assessment 9. Theory and Method in Studying Human Rights
Name: Studying Human Rights (Paperback) – Routledge
Description: By Todd Landman. This book draws on key theories and methods from the social sciences to develop a framework for the systematic study of human rights problems. It argues that solid empirical analysis of human rights problems rests on examining the observable practices...
Categories: Comparative Politics, Human Rights, Political Sociology