ABSTRACT

First Published in 2004. As the new millennium leaves behind the most violent of centuries, human rights activists and international agencies are looking to a new Age of Rights. Feminists have been prominent among those struggling 'from below' to reconstruct human rights: the slogan 'women's rights are human rights' has become a central claim of the global women's movement; feminist theorists have argued for an explicit inclusion of women and gender in human rights tenets; and United Nations forums have become central sites of an energetic new global feminist 'public', providing unprecedented avenues for feminist initiatives and action. It is clear, however, that feminist re-shapings of human rights have been engaged in complex conversations with both human rights claims and with feminist and gender politics in all their many local versions. The contributors to this volume address these complex conversations through a number of case studies within the Asia-Pacific region.

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

Gender politics and the reimagining of human rights in the Asia-Pacific

chapter |23 pages

Sexual violence, silence, and human rights discourse

The emergence of the military prostitution issue

chapter |23 pages

The state and the women's movement

Instabilities in the discourse of ‘rights' in India

chapter |17 pages

The human rights of gendered citizens

Notes from Indonesia

chapter |23 pages

Woman ikat raet long human raet o no?

Women's rights, human rights and domestic violence in Vanuatu

chapter |25 pages

‘Hear us, women of Papua New Guinea!'

Melanesian women and human rights

chapter |21 pages

The Contemplacion fiasco

The hanging of a Filipino domestic worker in Singapore

chapter |18 pages

Mothers of the disappeared in the diaspora

Globalization and human rights