Human Rights Of, By, and For the People: How to Critique and Change the US Constitution

Front Cover
Keri Iyall Smith, Louis Edgar Esparza, Judith Blau
Routledge, Feb 3, 2017 - Social Science - 216 pages

Together, the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights comprise the constitutional foundation of the United States. These—the oldest governing documents still in use in the world—urgently need an update, just as the constitutions of other countries have been updated and revised. Human Rights Of, By, and For the People brings together lawyers and sociologists to show how globalization and climate change offer an opportunity to revisit the founding documents. Each proposes specific changes that would more closely align US law with international law. The chapters also illustrate how constitutions are embedded in society and shaped by culture. The constitution itself sets up contentious relationships among the three branches of government and between the federal government and each state government, while the Bill of Rights and subsequent amendments begrudgingly recognize the civil and political rights of citizens. These rights are described by legal scholars as "negative rights," specifically as freedoms from infringements rather than as positive rights that affirm personhood and human dignity. The contributors to this volume offer "positive rights" instead. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), written in the middle of the last century, inspires these updates. Nearly every other constitution in the world has adopted language from the UDHR.

The contributors use intersectionality, critical race theory, and contemporary critiques of runaway economic inequality to ground their interventions in sociological argument.

 

Contents

List of Illustrations
Why Revise?
Social Movements and
A Place Called Liberty
Wherefore The Despotism of the Petticoat? American
Freedoms and Rights
For
Housing Food
Revise Now
Why a Sociology of Human Rights?
For a Decolonized US Constitution
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights as
Creating a Modern Constitution
Index

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About the author (2017)

Keri E. Iyall Smith is Associate Professor of Sociology at Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts and is author of The State and Indigenous Movements (Routledge).

Louis Edgar Esparza is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Latin American Studies at California State University at Los Angeles.

Judith R. Blau is Professor Emerita at the University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill, retiring in 2014 after a teaching career that spanned forty-five years.

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