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'This is the World: Have Faith'*
Sundhya Pahuja **
Full text available: PDF format **
Abstract
** Dylan Thomas, 'Our Eunuch Dreams', Collected Poems (1952), at
14.
In recent critically inclined texts on human rights, we find a
desire to acknowledge the cultural specificity of the human rights regime, to
consider the colonial origins of international law and to take account of the
putative axiom of globalization. This trilogy is often accompanied by an
asserted faith (however vestigial) in the human rights regime. In this essay,
the author explores the paradox of such a convergence, asking whether such
texts (and the one at hand in particular) are unintentionally performing the
question which marks the zeitgeist - that is whether human rights law can ever
be anything other than imperializing. To the extent that any sensitization of
human rights to its history and context involves a project of 'refounding' them
- no matter how 'diverse' the foundation - it would seem that the answer is no.
Arguably such projects remain ensnared in the modern oscillation between the
myth of universality on one hand and the nihilism of cultural relativism on the
other, ironically forgoing consideration of the relationality of being implied
by that very oscillation.

* Shelley Wright, International Human Rights, Decolonisation and
Globalisation: Becoming Human. London and New York: Routledge, 2001.
** Senior Lecturer, Law School, University of Melbourne, PhD
Candidate, Birkbeck, University of London
 
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