Kolliniati's groundbreaking book, Interpreting Human Rights: Narratives from Refugee Centers in Greece, challenges the notion that the interpretation and application of human rights primarily occur within the corridors of power in Strasbourg or official European institutions.
Kolliniati's groundbreaking book, Interpreting Human Rights: Narratives from Refugee Centers in Greece, challenges the notion that the interpretation and application of human rights primarily occur within the corridors of power in Strasbourg or official European institutions.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
MariäArtemis Kolliniati is an adjunct lecturer of Human Rights, Political Theory and Forced Migration in the MA collaborative programs at TU Darmstadt and Goethe University Frankfurt. She teaches Human Rights at the Hellenic Open University and 'Ethics, Politics, Law' at the University of Athens School of Philosophy. Previously, she taught Jurisprudence at the University of Glasgow Law School. She was awarded a scholarship from the State Scholarships Foundation (I.K.Y.) for her postdoctoral research, which she pursued and completed at the University of Athens School of Political Science. She holds a PhD in Political Science with a focus on Political Theory (2018) from the Ruprecht¿Karl¿University of Heidelberg.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction PART 1 Methodology 1. Human rights and local level 2. Empirical research: methodology and theoretical framework PART 2 Legal framework and the emergence of hotspots 3. EU and national legal provisions about asylum seekers 4. Hotspots mandate and the role of the EU PART 3 Empirical research: narratives of local actors 5. Chios, Vial 6. Cos, Pyli 7. Leros, Lepida 8. Lesvos, Moria until September 2020 and Mavrovouni or Kara Tepe 9. Samos, Vathy PART 4 Local narratives and political attitudes 10. Partiality: communitarianism and conservatism 11. Impartiality: global liberalism and egalitarian liberalism PART 5 Glocalisation of human rights 12. Limiting the interpretation of human rights 13. Pushbacks 14. Portraying the relationship between human rights and Reception and Identification Centers (RICs) in Chios, Cos, Leros, Lesvos, Samos 15. Human rights fulfillment at the local level: glocalisation and vernacularization of human rights through social justice and solidarity Conclusion Bibliography Appendix Index
Introduction PART 1 Methodology 1. Human rights and local level 2. Empirical research: methodology and theoretical framework PART 2 Legal framework and the emergence of hotspots 3. EU and national legal provisions about asylum seekers 4. Hotspots mandate and the role of the EU PART 3 Empirical research: narratives of local actors 5. Chios, Vial 6. Cos, Pyli 7. Leros, Lepida 8. Lesvos, Moria until September 2020 and Mavrovouni or Kara Tepe 9. Samos, Vathy PART 4 Local narratives and political attitudes 10. Partiality: communitarianism and conservatism 11. Impartiality: global liberalism and egalitarian liberalism PART 5 Glocalisation of human rights 12. Limiting the interpretation of human rights 13. Pushbacks 14. Portraying the relationship between human rights and Reception and Identification Centers (RICs) in Chios, Cos, Leros, Lesvos, Samos 15. Human rights fulfillment at the local level: glocalisation and vernacularization of human rights through social justice and solidarity Conclusion Bibliography Appendix Index
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