Human Rights PRAXIS and the Struggle for Survival
Human Rights PRAXIS and the Struggle for Survival
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Author(s): Armaline, William T.
ISBN No.: 9781032347318
Pages: 320
Year: 202408
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 234.60
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"What could be more important than a universal human rights praxis at a time when humanity faces multiple existential threats and fascism is resurgent? Armaline and Silfen Glasberg lay out the urgency of the historic moment from a critical sociological perspective. "Overlapping threats to human survival" are rooted in the runaway crises of global capitalism and the enormous power that transnational capital wields over states and peoples. A global working-class movement fighting for a democratic eco-socialism is our best, and perhaps only hope for the future. Theoretically perspicacious yet written with passion and commitment, this is a book for and about our turbulent times. It should be widely read in and out of the academy." William I. Robinson, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Global and International Studies, Latin American, and Iberian Studies, University of California-Santa Barbara; Author of Can Global Capitalism Endure (Clarity Press) and The Global Police State (Pluto Press). "A world careening from crisis to crisis among nations and social divisions within nations, confronted by multiple wars based on leaders' historic miscalculations, and threatened by expressions of white supremacy, fascism, holocausts and urgent mass migrations literally screams the need for daring books of social criticism.


A new global economy is replacing an old one. The former is much more eager to adjust than the latter. This book offers powerful insights that might help us all navigate the truly dangerous times emerging." Richard D. Wolff, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of Massachusetts; Founder/Director of Democracy at Work and Host of Economic Update. "From the transnational capitalist class to the global migration explosion, Armaline and Silfen Glasberg spell out precisely how the contradictions of capitalism seep into our political, social, and natural worlds, causing grave threats to human rights and survival. In their clear and searing analysis of legal human rights, they argue that it is time to place optimism and hope in a new human rights, shaped and enforced by the rights holders (the humans!) not the duty-bearers (the states). Armaline and Silfen Glasberg brilliantly make the case for a future of human rights in all of our communities, by all of our communities.


" Keri E. Iyall Smith, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice; Editor, Sociology Without Borders; Enrolled Member of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe. This book is designed to bridge the divide between theory and practice while further developing a critical sociology of human rights. In a field long dominated by law and political science, the authors provide an invaluable alternative understanding of rights. Dominique Clément, Professor, Sociology, University of Alberta, Royal Society of Canada [CNSAS], author of Debating Rights Inflation: A Sociology of Human Rights.


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