Denialism and human rights:
"This book contains a selection of papers that were presented during the multidisciplinary conference 'Denialism and Human Rights'... organised by the Maastricht Centre for Human Rights on 22 and 23 January 2015"
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Format: | Buch |
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Intersentia
[2016]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Zusammenfassung: | "This book contains a selection of papers that were presented during the multidisciplinary conference 'Denialism and Human Rights'... organised by the Maastricht Centre for Human Rights on 22 and 23 January 2015" |
Beschreibung: | xvi, 488 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9781780683690 1780683693 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Acknowledgements........................................................v
Chapter I.
Introduction
Roland Moerland, Hans Nelen and Jan Willems....................... 1
1. Rationale of this Book.............................................2
2. The Present Volume................................................ 3
2.1. Introduction..................................................3
2.2. Themes and Contributions......................................4
Chapter II.
Denialism and the Problem of Indifference
Willem De Haan.....................................................9
1. What Is Denial?............................................... 11
2. What Is Denialism?............................................. 13
3. Indifference.................................................... 16
4. The Mass Media................................................... 18
5. Human Rights Organisations....................................... 19
6. Tackling the Problem of Indifference..............................20
7. Denialism and Critical Criminology................................22
Chapter III.
Denial and Acknowledgment in Public Responses to Information
about Human Rights Violations
Irene Bruna Seu...................................................25
1. Introduction......................................................25
2. Denial.......................................................... 27
3. Socio-Cultural Vocabularies of Denial: Tn Countries Like That’... 31
4. ‘Switching Off’ - Denial as Self-Protective Defence Mechanism.....34
5. Acknowledgement................................................. 36
6. Manageable Emotions...............................................36
7. Meaningful Understanding......................................... 39
8. Morally Significant............................................. 42
9. Conclusions.......................................................46
Intersentia vii
Contents
PART I.
CHILDREN S RIGHTS
Chapter IV.
Diagnosing and Dispelling Denialism Regarding Children
James G. Dwyer................................................... 51
1. Forms of Denialism Regarding Children............................ 51
1.1. Moral Denialism............................................. 51
1.1.1. Family Formation......................................54
1.1.2. Dissolution of Family Relationships...................55
1.1.3. Authority over Non-Autonomous Persons.................55
1.2. Conceptual Denialism.........................................56
1.3. Descriptive Denialism........................................60
1.4. Empirical Denialism..........................................63
2. Overcoming Denialism Regarding Children...........................66
Chapter V.
Too Close to Home? The Denial of Prejudice and Discrimination
against Children
Jan C.M. Willems.................................................69
1. Introduction..................................................... 70
2. The Denial of Juvenile Ageism.....................................75
2.1. Personal Denial: Moral Denialism and Childism...............75
2.2. Cultural Denial: Conceptual Denialism and Parentiarchy......77
2.3. Official Denial: Descriptive Denialism and Transism........ 78
2.4. Academic Denial: Empirical Denialism and Adultism.......... 81
2.5. The Juvism Onion........................................... 81
2.6. Denial, Denialism, and Denialisms...........................83
3. Ten Child Abuse Denialisms........................................85
3.1. Denialism 1: Defining Child Abuse............................86
3.2. Denialism 2: The Scale of Child Abuse...................... 87
3.3. Denialism 3: The Seriousness of Child Abuse.................89
3.4. Denialism 4: The Love Myth..................................90
3.5. Denialism 5: The Blood-Tie Myth.............................90
3.6. Denialism 6: The Resilience Myth........................... 91
3.7. Denialism 7: The Child Protection Myth......................91
3.8. Denialism 8: Immunity and Impunity Denial...................92
3.9. Denialism 9: Unfitness Denial (Automatic Competence Myth) .... 93
3.10. Denialism 10: Denial in Human and Children’s Rights Research .. 94
4. Conclusion........................................................95
viii Intersentia
Contents
Chapter VI.
Denial of Developmental Needs of Foster Children by Dutch Youth Care
Services
A.M. Weterings, in collaboration with Jan C.M. Willems............97
1. Introduction.......................................................97
2. The Start of a Transgenerational Cycle as Shown by Research
on the Development of Foster Children.............................99
2.1. Descriptions of the Development of Some Children Shortly
after their Arrival in Foster Families...................... 100
2.2. Reflection................................................. 101
3. Attachment Security is Necessary for Adequate Development......... 103
4. The Relationship of the Child with his Foster Parents and his Parents . 106
4.1. Relationship with Foster Parents............................ 106
4.2. Influence of‘Parent Contact’................................ 107
5. Loyalty of the Foster Child to his Parents....................... 109
6. Contra-Indicators for Reunification.............................. 110
6.1. The History between the Foster Child and his Parent......... Ill
6.2. The Relationship between the Child and his Foster Parents.... Ill
6.3. The Relationship between the Child and his Parent............ 112
6.4. Reactions of the Child During and after the Visits to his Parent .. 112
6.5. The Policy Objective that the Foster Child Should Eventually
Return to his Parent........................................ 112
6.6. An Example of Unjustified Reunification: Ben, 3V* Years Old. 113
7. Breaking the Transgenerational Cycle of Parental Neglect:
The Pedagogical Decision Model for Foster Care.................... 113
7.1. Early Results of the PDM Programme........................... 115
7.2. An Example: Lisa, 1 Year and 4 Months Old.................. 116
7.3. First Evaluation of the PDM Programme with the PSI
Questionnaires.............................................. 117
7.4. Concluding Remarks......................................... 117
8. Conclusion....................................................... 118
Chapter VII.
Crime in the Intercountry Adoption Industry: Towards a Broader
Definition of Child Trafficking
Elvira Loibl......................................................... 119
1. Introduction.......................................................... 119
2. The Intercountry Adoption System’s Underbelly......................... 121
3. Moving Beyond a Legal Definition of Crime - Henry and Lanier’s
‘Prism of Crime’..................................................... 125
Intersentia
IX
Contents
4. The Prismatic Analysis of the Dimensions of Child Trafficking
for the Purpose of Adoption.......................................... 128
4.1. Individual and Social Harm..................................... 128
4.2. Invisibility of Harm........................................... 132
4.3. Lack of Public Agreement on Seriousness........................ 134
4.4. Low Probability of Severe Social Response...................... 139
5. Towards a Broader Definition of Child Trafficking..................... 141
PART II.
GENOCIDE
Chapter VIII.
The BBC Documentary ‘Rwanda’s Untold Story’: Acknowledging
Genocide or Denying It?
Roland Moerland.............................................. 147
1. Introduction................................................. 147
2. Denial in Theory............................................. 151
2.1. Genocide, Denial and Annihilation....................... 151
2.2. Genocide Denial......................................... 153
2.3. Denial of Genocide...................................... 154
2.4. ‘Denial’ in Effect...................................... 155
2.5. Genocide Denialism...................................... 156
2.6. The Object of Denial.................................... 156
3. Denial at Work............................................... 158
3.1. An Official Genocide Denial Discourse................... 158
3.2. Recycling Official Genocide Denial...................... 160
4. The BBC Documentary ‘Rwanda’s Untold Story’.................. 163
4.1. Vantage Point........................................... 163
4.2. Nature and Direction of Violence........................ 166
4.3. Number of Victims....................................... 166
4.4. The Downing of the Plane................................ 169
5. Rwanda’s Untold Story - Acknowledging Genocide or Denying It?... . 170
6. Concluding Remarks........................................... 173
Chapter IX.
Fighting NS Ideology and Holocaust Denial in Austria: Past and
Present Perspectives
Johannes Keiler.................................................. 175
1. Introduction...................................................... 175
2. Criminalising Denial and Extremist Ideology....................... 177
x
Intersentia
Contents
3. The NS Prohibition Act or the Long and Rocky Road to Coming
to Terms with the Past........................................ 179
4. Fighting Right-Wing Extremism, NS Ideology and Denial
of the Holocaust: Present Perspective........................... 183
4.1. The NS Prohibiton Act: Introduction........................ 184
4.2. The Prohibition Act: The Offences.......................... 185
4.2.1. Re-Establishing, Participation in, Supporting
or Promoting a NS Organisation........................ 186
4.2.2. Acts of Violence, Carried out as a Means to Re-engage
with NS Activity...................................... 188
4.2.3. The Catch-All Provision of §3g....................... 189
4.2.4. Denial of the NS Holocaust and Other NS Crimes....... 192
5. Concluding Remarks............................................... 195
Chapter X.
The Holocaust and its Denial: A Paradigm in our Historical Culture
Georgi Verbeeck.................................................. 199
1. History and Memory............................................... 199
2. Holocaust Denial..................................................201
3. Scholarly and Legal Response......................................202
4. Defence...........................................................203
5. Criticism.........................................................204
5.1. General.....................................................204
5.2. Role of Historicans.........................................205
5.3. Freedom of Speech...........................................206
5.4. Tactics.....................................................206
5.5. Speech Act..................................................207
6. Use and Abuse of the Holocaust Paradigm...........................208
6.1. Political Usage.............................................209
6.2. ‘Lessons from the Past’.....................................210
6.3. Desensitisation............................................ 211
7. Epilogue..........................................................212
Chapter XI.
Can the Law Understand the Harm of Genocide Denial?
Rob Kahn.........................................................215
1. Introduction......................................................215
2. Survivors.........................................................219
2.1. Who Does Genocide Denial Harm?..............................219
2.2. Human Dignity as a Measuring Stick..........................220
2.3. Harms to Victims............................................222
Intersentia
XI
Contents
3. Jews, Armenians and Tutsi (Among Others)........................224
4. Which Speech Acts are Hateful?..................................227
5. Additional Harms of Genocide Denial: Threats and Falsity........229
5.1. Threats to Society at Large................................229
5.2. Genocide Denial as Harmful Falsity........................231
6. Conclusion: The Importance of Context...........................233
Chapter XII.
On the Breaking of Consensus: The Perin^ek Case, the Armenian
Genocide and International Criminal Law
Sevane Garibian..................................................235
1. Introductory Remarks.............................................238
2. A ‘Clear Basis in Law’: Revisiting the Origins of the Nuremberg
Statute..........................................................241
3. ‘Facts ... Clearly Established by an International Court’:
An Overview of the First Attempt at International Prosecution....244
4. Conclusion.......................................................248
PART III.
(INTER)NATIONAL ORGANISATIONS
Chapter XIII.
Denial of Genocide by Bystanders in International Politics
Fred Grunfeld....................................................253
1. Introduction.....................................................253
2. Bystanders at National and International Level...................255
3. Research Results of the Role of Bystanders in Gross Human Rights
Violations.......................................................256
4. Knowledge and Action.............................................257
5. Denialism: Literal, Interpretive and Implicatory Denial..........259
6. Labelling Genocide Rejected......................................260
7. Socio-Psychological Filter.......................................263
8. Conclusions......................................................264
Chapter XIV.
International Organisations and Denialism: The Case of the African Union
Konstantinos D. Magliveras......................................267
1. Introduction.....................................................267
2. Why the Case of the African Union is Different...................270
XII
Intersentia
Contents
3. The Intense Problems Facing Africa and the Ensuing Challenges
Posed for the AU...............................................271
4. The Genocide in Darfur and the Case of Hisséne Habré...........273
5. The International Criminal Law Section of the African Court
of Justice and Human Rights as a Further Example of the AU’s
Denialism...................................................278
6. Are there Mitigating Factors for the Denialism Shown by the AU? .... 281
7. Conclusion.......................................................283
Chapter XV.
Killing Through the State in the Colombian War and Getting Away
with Murder: An Exploration of Organisational Crime and Its Denial
Michael Reed Hurtado.............................................285
1. A Glimpse into the COLAR Sham-KIAs...............................288
1.1. Killing in the Colombian War and Sham-KIAs..................288
1.2. Sham-KIAs in 2002-2008: The Variation in Modality...........295
2. Turning on the Heat: Body Counting and Kill Quotas...............299
2.1. Bureaucratic Killing and Denial.............................300
2.2. Kill, Take No Prisoners: Connivance and Conformity.........303
2.3. Snatching the Body Count Policy............................305
3. Controlled Acknowledgement + Individual Responsibility =
Successful Denial!...............................................309
4. A Word in Conclusion: Accounting for Organisational
Engagement...................................................... 312
PART IV.
NEW PENOLOGY
Chapter XVI.
Jim Crow 3.0: Denial, Human Rights, and American Racialised
Mass Incarceration
Cecil J. Hunt, II............................................... 317
1. Introduction.................................................... 317
2. Jim Crow in America............................................. 319
3. Denial and Mass Incarceration....................................322
4. Racialised Mass Incarceration....................................324
5. Drivers of Mass Incarceration....................................328
5.1. The War on Drugs............................................328
5.2. Racial Profiling............................................330
6. Conclusion.......................................................334
Intersentia xiii
Contents
Chapter XVII.
Justifying Acts of Denialism: The Case of Prisoner Disenfranchisement
in the UK
Samantha Morgan-Williams........................................337
1. Introduction................................................... 337
2. Denialism and Human Rights: Political Denialism.................338
2.1. Prisoner Disenfranchisement in the UK......................340
2.2. Prisoner Disenfranchisement Case Law before the ECtHR......341
2.3. Developments 2014-2015.................................... 345
3. Justifications for the Ban on Prisoner Voting Rights............347
3.1. Civic Death Argument and Historical Justifications.........348
3.2. The Civic Virtue Argument..................................351
3.3. The Social Contract........................................352
3.4. Achieving Sentencing Aims..................................354
4. Politics, Political Denialism and the Prisoner Disenfranchisement
Debate: A Moral Panic?..........................................356
5. Conclusion......................................................362
PART V.
SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL RIGHTS
Chapter XVIII.
Poverty, Just World Thinking and Human Rights Law: A Study
of the Relevance of Denial for Normative Legal Research
Gustavo Arosemena...............................................367
1. Introduction.....................................................367
2. Characterising Denial............................................368
3. The Sidelining of Poverty in International Human Rights Law......370
4. Flimsy Excuses...................................................372
5. Explaining the Flimsy Excuses: Belief in Just a World............375
6. The Incompleteness of BJW and the Need for Normative Standards .. . 377
6.1. The Explanation-Justification Gap...........................377
6.2. The Inescapable Need for Normative Standards.............. 378
6.3. The Particular Aims of Law.................................380
6.4. The Dangers of Undermining Academic Communication..........381
7. The Continuing Relevance of Denial.............................. 381
7.1. The Identification of Value.................................382
7.2. Undermining Some Forms of Political Liberalism..............383
8. Conclusions.................................................... 385
xiv
Intersentia
Contents
Chapter XIX.
Genocide Denial and Refugees: A Lack of Protection
in International Law?
Regina Menachery Paulose........................................387
1. Introduction....................................................387
2. Genocide Convention.............................................388
2.1. Groups.....................................................389
2.2. Intent....................................................390
2.3. Genocide Denial.......................................... 391
3. Refugee Convention..............................................393
3.1. Well Founded Fear - Persecution............................393
3.2. Nexus.....................................................394
3.3. Causes of Flights or Provision for Prevention.............395
3.4. Asylum Process and Denialism..............................396
3.5. Exclusion.................................................397
4. Tying in the Conventions - Bangladesh...........................398
4.1. Genocide..................................................398
4.2. Refugees..................................................400
5. Conclusion: Potential Solutions.................................401
Chapter XX.
Climate Justice: Climate Change and Human Rights
Zoi Aliozi......................................................403
1. Introduction....................................................403
2. Connecting Human Rights to Climate Change.......................407
3. Climate Change and Human Rights: Reasons of Silence.............412
4. Conclusive Remarks..............................................415
Chapter XXI.
A State in Denial: The ‘Intentional’ Sexual Transmission of HIV
in South Africa
Annelize Nienaber...............................................419
1. Introduction.....................................................419
2. Stanley Cohen’s States of Denial.................................420
3. The Criminal Law Element of Fault in Relation to HIV
Transmission to Sexual Partners.................................421
4. North Gauteng High Court’s Judgment in Phiri v. S................425
5. A State in Denial: Implications of Culpability for the Unlawful
Transmission of HIV During Sexual Intercourse...................427
6. Conclusion.......................................................434
Intersentia
XV
Contents
Chapter XXII.
Olympic Idealism and Human Rights Infringements: How Athletes
Cope with an Uncomfortable Reality
Radka Babjakova, Sharon Deten, Jennifer Etore, Kim Geurtjens,
Roland Moerland and Hans Nelen.............................437
1. Introduction...................................................437
2. Olympic Idealism and Human Rights..............................440
3. Denial at Work............................................... 444
4. Theoretical Reflection.........................................447
5. Epilogue.......................................................449
Chapter XXIII.
Denialism and Human Rights: an Afterword
David Nelken................................................. 453
1. Defining Denialism: Going Beyond ‘Cohens States of Denial’.....455
2. Connecting Denialism and Human Rights: The Harm of Denial
and Harm by Denial.............................................464
3. Responding to Denialism: Putting the World to Rights......... 473
About the Authors...................................................483
xvi
Intersentia
The safeguarding of human rights remains highly problematic, despite the
proliferation of human rights instruments and the many actions taken by a variety
of actors, such as governmental and non-governmental organisations, (individual)
states and the international community over the past decades. Human rights
violations do still occur on a large scale and injustice remains rampant. Central to
this problem appears to be that social, economic, cultural and political structures
in societies provide denialist defence mechanisms. Such deeply embedded
denialism causes and/or facilitates human rights violations, because the true
nature of the problems involved remains fully or partly unacknowledged and as a
result appropriate action remains absent. In order to safeguard the effectuation
of human rights it is thus pertinent to acknowledge and address this problem of
denialism and develop strategies to move beyond it.
To address the above-mentioned problem, an international conference was
organised on the theme of Denialism and Human Rights by the Maastricht Centre
for Human Rights in 2015, which brought together scholars, practitioners and
students from various disciplines and fields to unearth and address denialism in
the context of their own particular area of research.
The present volume contains a unique collection of papers that were presented
during the conference. The content of the papers ranges from more general
reflections on the theme of denialism and human rights to more specific areas
of research that are relevant in terms of denialism such as genocide, children s
rights, the role of (inter) national organisations, penology, and social, economic
and cultural rights.
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discipline | Rechtswissenschaft Politologie |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content |
genre_facet | Konferenzschrift |
id | DE-604.BV044852681 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:02:53Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781780683690 1780683693 |
language | English |
lccn | 016590928 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-030247541 |
oclc_num | 961210167 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-739 |
physical | xvi, 488 Seiten |
publishDate | 2016 |
publishDateSearch | 2016 |
publishDateSort | 2016 |
publisher | Intersentia |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Denialism and human rights edited by Roland Moerland, Hans Nelen, Jan Willems Cambridge ; Antwerp ; Portland Intersentia [2016] © 2016 xvi, 488 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "This book contains a selection of papers that were presented during the multidisciplinary conference 'Denialism and Human Rights'... organised by the Maastricht Centre for Human Rights on 22 and 23 January 2015" Conference papers and proceedings / fast / (OCoLC)fst01423772 Denial (Psychology) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00890331 Human rights / fast / (OCoLC)fst00963285 Justification (Law) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00985245 Human rights Congresses Justification (Law) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Human rights Justification (Law) (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content Moerland, Roland 1976- (DE-588)1097299627 edt Nelen, J. M. 1961- (DE-588)172282934 edt Willems, Jan C. edt Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030247541&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030247541&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Denialism and human rights Conference papers and proceedings / fast / (OCoLC)fst01423772 Denial (Psychology) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00890331 Human rights / fast / (OCoLC)fst00963285 Justification (Law) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00985245 Human rights Congresses Justification (Law) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Human rights Justification (Law) |
subject_GND | (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | Denialism and human rights |
title_auth | Denialism and human rights |
title_exact_search | Denialism and human rights |
title_full | Denialism and human rights edited by Roland Moerland, Hans Nelen, Jan Willems |
title_fullStr | Denialism and human rights edited by Roland Moerland, Hans Nelen, Jan Willems |
title_full_unstemmed | Denialism and human rights edited by Roland Moerland, Hans Nelen, Jan Willems |
title_short | Denialism and human rights |
title_sort | denialism and human rights |
topic | Conference papers and proceedings / fast / (OCoLC)fst01423772 Denial (Psychology) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00890331 Human rights / fast / (OCoLC)fst00963285 Justification (Law) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00985245 Human rights Congresses Justification (Law) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Human rights Justification (Law) |
topic_facet | Conference papers and proceedings / fast / (OCoLC)fst01423772 Denial (Psychology) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00890331 Human rights / fast / (OCoLC)fst00963285 Justification (Law) / fast / (OCoLC)fst00985245 Human rights Congresses Justification (Law) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Congresses Denial (Psychology) Human rights Justification (Law) Konferenzschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030247541&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030247541&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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