Description

Book Synopsis
Taking a critical attitude of dissatisfaction towards rights, the central premise of this book is that rights are technologies of governmentality. They are a regulating discourse that is itself managed through governing tactics and techniques – hence governing (through) rights. Part I examines the 'problem of government' (through) rights. The opening chapter describes governmentality as a methodology that is then used to interrogate the relationship between rights and governance in three contexts: the international, regional and local. How rights regulate certain identities and conceptions of what is good governance is examined through the case study of non-state actors, specifically the NGO, in the international setting; through a case study of rights agencies, and the role of experts, indicators and the rights-based approach in the European Union or regional setting; and, in terms of the local, the challenge that the blossoming language of responsibility and community poses to rights in the name of less government (Big Society) is problematised. In Part II, on resisting government (through) rights, the book also asks what counter-conducts are possible using rights language (questioning rioting as resistance), and whether counter-conduct can be read as an ethos of the political, rights-bearing subject and as a new ethical right. Thus, the book bridges a divide between critical theory (ie Foucauldian understandings of power as governmentality) and human rights law.

Table of Contents
Part I: Government (Through) Rights 1. Introduction 2. Governing (Through) Agencies: The EU and Rights in EUrope 3. Governing (Through) Non-Governmental Actors: The Global Human Rights Architecture and the International NGO Part II: Resisting Government (Through) Rights 4. Resisting Rights with Responsibility 5. Counter-Conduct as Right and as Ethics 6. Conclusion: A Permanent State of Dissatisfaction

Governing (Through) Rights

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    A Paperback / softback by Bal Sokhi-Bulley

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      View other formats and editions of Governing (Through) Rights by Bal Sokhi-Bulley

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 24/01/2019
      ISBN13: 9781509926824, 978-1509926824
      ISBN10: 1509926828

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Taking a critical attitude of dissatisfaction towards rights, the central premise of this book is that rights are technologies of governmentality. They are a regulating discourse that is itself managed through governing tactics and techniques – hence governing (through) rights. Part I examines the 'problem of government' (through) rights. The opening chapter describes governmentality as a methodology that is then used to interrogate the relationship between rights and governance in three contexts: the international, regional and local. How rights regulate certain identities and conceptions of what is good governance is examined through the case study of non-state actors, specifically the NGO, in the international setting; through a case study of rights agencies, and the role of experts, indicators and the rights-based approach in the European Union or regional setting; and, in terms of the local, the challenge that the blossoming language of responsibility and community poses to rights in the name of less government (Big Society) is problematised. In Part II, on resisting government (through) rights, the book also asks what counter-conducts are possible using rights language (questioning rioting as resistance), and whether counter-conduct can be read as an ethos of the political, rights-bearing subject and as a new ethical right. Thus, the book bridges a divide between critical theory (ie Foucauldian understandings of power as governmentality) and human rights law.

      Table of Contents
      Part I: Government (Through) Rights 1. Introduction 2. Governing (Through) Agencies: The EU and Rights in EUrope 3. Governing (Through) Non-Governmental Actors: The Global Human Rights Architecture and the International NGO Part II: Resisting Government (Through) Rights 4. Resisting Rights with Responsibility 5. Counter-Conduct as Right and as Ethics 6. Conclusion: A Permanent State of Dissatisfaction

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