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Concrete Utopia conceptualizes the human rights project of the last two and a half centuries as a “backward-looking” endeavor, which, in order to move forward, must return to the utopian roots of its foundational documents. Human rights advance by judging the ills of the present world from a standpoint in the future where they might no longer exist—a fundamentally utopian gesture. This peculiar character of human rights makes them continually ripe for reinvention and for responding to changing world circumstances. Looking at topics such as the Auschwitz trials in Frankfurt in the mid-1960s, public outrage to the Vietnam War, the US civil rights movement and the founding of Amnesty International in 1961, this book surveys the history of human rights and how they have been reconceived at different points in time. It closes by sketching the way they may be re-envisioned for new struggles in the 21st century.At a time when the human rights project has endured criticism for being toothless or even for providing a pretext for military invasions, Kaleck argues that the current global crises, from inequality, to ecological collapse and the “age of pandemics,” can be countered by reinventing human rights work through feminist, decolonial and ecological interventions.
Durante más de dos décadas, Wolfang Kaleck ha viajado por el mundo para luchar junto a quienes sufren la injusticia a manos de jugadores poderosos, personas que, antes de la llegada de Kaleck y sus colegas, a menudo disfrutaban de la impunidad.El trabajo de Kaleck lo ha llevado a Buenos Aires, a apoyar a las madres de los jóvenes 'desaparecidos' bajo la dictadura militar argentina; a las comunidades sirias exiliadas, donde instrumentó el caso contra la tortura ordenada por los altos mandos del gobierno de Assad; a Centroamérica, donde colaboró con quienes persiguen a los militares guatemaltecos por sus masacres de indígenas; a Nueva York, para asociarse con el Centro de Derechos Constitucionales para emprender acciones contra Donald Rumsfeld por las ""técnicas de interrogatorio mejoradas"" que autorizó después del 11 de septiembre; y a Moscú, donde representa a Edward Snowden.Al relatar su participación en tales casos, Kaleck le da plena voz a aquellos a quienes representa, enfatizando el coraje y la persistencia que aportan a la búsqueda global de justicia. El resultado es un libro repleto de historias convincentes y vívidas que subrayan la idea de que, si bien el mundo suele ser un lugar terrible, las normas universales de derechos humanos pueden prevalecer cuando las personas están dispuestas a luchar por ellas.Wolfgang Kaleck es el fundador y secretario general del Centro Europeo de Derechos Humanos y Constitucionales (ECCHR) en Berlín. Trabajando con socios de todo el mundo, el ECCHR emprende acciones legales contra individuos, empresas y actores estatales que han infringido la ley relativa a los derechos humanos.
In this book, Wolfgang Kaleck, an internationally active human rights and criminal lawyer, assesses the practice of international criminal law to date and analyses one of its main weaknesses: International criminal justice purports to be universal, but in reality it often operates in a politically selective manner. Until now, hardly any of those most responsible for international crimes committed by Western states have faced trial. Against the backdrop of this criticism, the book advocates a truly universal practice of international criminal law which holds even the most powerful accountable for crimes they have committed. Kaleck also tells the stories of survivors of human rights violations and human rights organizations that struggle for universal accountability for international crimes. He argues that the proponents of universal criminal justice must actively address existing double standards, as "it will not be possible to speak of a universal criminal justice system with equal rights and access to justice for all until the instigators and organizers of Guantánamo and of the atrocities in Chechnya are held accountable for their actions".
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