Transforming Human Rights through Decolonial Lens

This article problematizes the Human Rights conceptualization embodied in the International Human Rights Law corpus. It considers human rights as a Western construct rooted in a particular historical context, located in a specific ideological background and grounded in a concrete socio-cognitive sy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Davinia Gómez Sánchez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Jaén 2020-12-01
Series:Age of Human Rights Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistaselectronicas.ujaen.es/index.php/TAHRJ/article/view/5818
Description
Summary:This article problematizes the Human Rights conceptualization embodied in the International Human Rights Law corpus. It considers human rights as a Western construct rooted in a particular historical context, located in a specific ideological background and grounded in a concrete socio-cognitive system. Thus, in disregard of features of non-dominant cultures, the mainstream human rights grammar became a discourse of empire. Building on TWAIL and decolonial theory, this article challenges that hegemonic human rights discourse while providing a justification for incorporating other conceptualizations of rights through an inter-epistemic conversation with alternative world-views.
ISSN:2340-9592