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Book ReviewsBouandel, Youcef. Human Rights and Comparative Politics.
Aldershot, UK: Dartmouth Publishing Company, 1997. Pp. x, 246. £38.50 This book focuses on an odd assortment of issues. It is written by a
political scientist but is, for the most part, notably free of the
methodological concerns of that discipline. It begins by reviewing the content
of human rights by reference mainly to the work of Jack Donnelly and Maurice
Cranston. It then provides a comparison of Eastern and Western perspectives and
moves on to review the literature on third generation rights. But the fall of
the Berlin Wall remains almost a close-kept secret in all of this. Despite the
occasional post-1989 reference, the analysis is firmly rooted in the Cold War
years. The same is true of the subsequent chapters on Amnesty International and
the Human Rights Committee. The latter's work is assessed almost exclusively on
the basis of its performance up until 1988, although its approach has changed
dramatically in the intervening years. The purpose of all this preliminary
analysis is to address questions of considerable interest: such as whether the
performance of different countries can be `measured' and then compared with one
another. Alas, the material is again sadly out of date. A chapter on
`democracy' refers to none of the outpouring of literature in recent years.
Instead, it relies largely upon the work of Robert Dahl, whose writings are
mistakenly attributed in the bibliography to Maurice Cranston. P.A.
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