In the post-9/11 world, governments are using the threat of terrorism to justify tightening national security and restricting basic Human rights.
As intolerance threatens diversity on a global scale, \'The Atlas of Human Rights\' serves as a crucial intervention to preserving and extending freedom..
It displays the areas that are beset with wars, conflict, migration, and genocide; details the geographic status of sexual freedom, racism, religious freedom, and the Rights of the disabled; and, focuses on women\'s rights, sex slavery, and the Rights of the child.
Vividly illustrated with colorful maps and charts, \'The Atlas of Human Rights\' charts both the progress and limitation of free expression and media censorship.
His comprehensive and succinct text explores judicial violations and legal restrictions that permit state-sponsored torture, indefinite detention, capital punishment, and police brutality.
Inspired by the United Nations\' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Andrew Fagan considers the nature of the state, national identity, and citizenship.
This timely book addresses the implications of this trend, revealing Human Rights inequities from nation to nation and the consequences of these inequities worldwide.
In the post-9/11 world, governments are using the threat of terrorism to justify tightening national security and restricting basic Human rights