The Language of Human Rights in West Germany by Lora Wildenthal: Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013 [Book Review]

Human Rights Review 15 (3):353-355 (2014)
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Abstract

This is an excerpt from the contentWildenthal’s tightly written study of “human rights as a strategic political language” , part of the Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights series, presents the reader with a finely honed and extensively researched analysis that tells the stories of key, yet less well-known, people involved with the postwar development of West German human rights organizations. Wildenthal persuasively asserts that human rights are shaped more by people than by abstract norms. The actors she describes made particular choices about how they would utilize the language of human rights in the very specific context of postwar West Germany, where she sees four particular usages of human rights emerging. First, organizations used the language of human rights to highlight the problematic Nazi past and to curb further abuses. Second, organizations appealed to human rights language to protect non-Jewish Germans . The first and second usages came into conflict in the immediate postwar – organizations

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