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Amnesty International and Human Rights Activism in Postwar Britain, 1945–1977 (Human Rights in History)
Cambridge University Press, 4/30/2020
EAN 9781107566552, ISBN10: 110756655X
Paperback, 356 pages, 22.6 x 16.5 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
In this definitive new account of the emergence of human rights activism in post-war Britain, Tom Buchanan shows how disparate individuals, organisations and causes gradually came to acquire a common identity as 'human rights activists'. This was a slow process whereby a coalition of activists, working on causes ranging from anti-fascism, anti-apartheid and decolonisation to civil liberties and the peace movement, began to come together under the banner of human rights. The launch of Amnesty International in 1961, and its landmark winning of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1977 provided a model and inspiration to many new activist movements in 'the field of human rights', and helped to affect major changes towards public and political attitudes towards human rights issues across the globe.
Introduction
1. Dawn
1934–50
2. Africa, decolonisation and human rights in the 1950s
3. Political imprisonment and human rights, 1945–64
4. The early years of Amnesty International, 1961–4
5. 'The crisis of growth', Amnesty International 1964–68
6. 1968
the UN Year for Human Rights
7. Torture states
1967–75
8. 'All things come to those who wait'
the later 1970s
Conclusion. The winds of history.