Shifting Power and Human Rights Diplomacy: India (original) (raw)
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ARSLAN AKHTAR ALI (Founder/CEO: Psychology Experts) Verified Consultant Psychologist on Marham.pk: http://www.marham.pk/online-consultation/psychologist/islamabad/mr-arslan-akhtar-ali-35283 Top 2% Researcher on Academia.edu: https://iiu-pk.academia.edu/ArslanAli Read free E-Book on "Human Psychology" written by Consultant Clinical Psychologist Arslan Akhtar Ali (Founder/CEO - Psychology Experts): https://www.academia.edu/97507542/Fight\_to\_Flight\_Book\_ Follow social media handles of Psychology Experts for the updates and insightful positivity as Life is Beautiful. دماغی صحت سے متعلق مثبت اپ ڈیٹس کے لیے سوشل میڈیا ہینڈلز دیکھیں کیونکہ زندگی خوبصورت ہے۔ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/experts27 Instagram Username: psychologyexperts27 Instagram Link: https://www.instagram.com/psychologyexperts27/ YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@psychologyexperts27 Google Review: http://shorturl.at/aCQX4
A study of human rights organizations and issues in India
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The aim of this study is to examine the idea and practice of human rights in the particular context of India, with reference to a diverse set of organizations that emerged as a response to rights abuse, perpetrated both by state agencies and by dominant sections of the society. This work examines thirteen such organizations: ten of which are indigenous non-governmental organizations (NGOs), two are governmental organizations, and one is an intentional NGO, namely Amnesty International. The development of the idea of human rights in India is examined with reference to the major religious traditions, and the contributions of some national leaders (Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar). It is argued that the demand for civil and political rights, first raised by the Western educated elite, grew as a response to changes in the political system during the British rule, and was incorporated in the nationalist ideology, championed by the Congress party. The first human rights organization, establish...
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Chapter for Human Rights in India, ed. Satvinder Juss We have been here [in Trichy Women's Prison] for over a month. We get charged with new cases every time we are taken to the Court. It is only after being part of the [anti-nuclear] struggle that we realized that trying to establish one's right to live as one wishes, pursuing traditional livelihoods and also questioning activities that are being implemented without consulting the people is equivalent to crime and sedition (Sundari 2012). 1 At the Press Club of India in New Delhi, Amnesty International launched its 2006 report among a room full of journalists, activists and scholars. It was concluded for the first time that India and China's rapid development has become another progenitor of human rights abuses. As the report reads for the two countries: 'Economic development did not prioritlze realization of economic, social and cultural rights'. 2 In comparison to China, India is renowned as the 'world's largest democracy'. 3 However, the juggernaut of neoliberal policies from the 1990s,