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ID139773
Title ProperPower, privilege and rights
Other Title Informationhow the powerful and powerless create a vernacular of rights
LanguageENG
AuthorTagliarina, Daniel
Summary / Abstract (Note)Much of the scholarship on how marginalised groups deploy human rights discourse focuses on how these groups translate human rights norms into the group’s vernacular. The marginalised are not alone in this respect. The American Christian Right employs the power of rights claims – which they have previously rejected – to preserve Christian privilege at the expense of greater religious inclusion. This paper demonstrates that even the ‘powerful’ need to vernacularise rights norms and ideals when the group has no meaningful history of engaging with rights and the law. This shared process of vernacularisation highlights the plasticity of rights, and how they can be bent to serve the relatively powerful or the relatively powerless.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 36, No.6; 2015: p.1191-1206
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 36 No 6
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  Vernacularisation ;  Christian Right


 
 
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