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  1. Toward a critical anthropology of human rights.Mark Goodale - 2009 - In Human rights: an anthropological reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  2. Human rights: an anthropological reader.Mark Goodale (ed.) - 2009 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    This volume synthesizes these different approaches and demonstrates how anthropologists have engaged with human rights as committed activists, empirical ...
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    Mirrors of Justice: Law and Power in the Post-Cold War Era.Kamari Maxine Clarke & Mark Goodale (eds.) - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    Mirrors of Justice is a groundbreaking study of the meanings of and possibilities for justice in the contemporary world. The book brings together a group of both prominent and emerging scholars to reconsider the relationships between justice, international law, culture, power, and history through case studies of a wide range of justice processes. The book's eighteen authors examine the ambiguities of justice in Europe, Africa, Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, and Melanesia through critical empirical and historical chapters. The introduction (...)
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    Becoming irrelevant.Mark Goodale - 2012 - In Thomas Cushman (ed.), Handbook of human rights. New York: Routledge. pp. 180.
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  5. Introduction : human rights and anthropology.Mark Goodale - 2009 - In Human rights: an anthropological reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  6. The misbegotten monad : anthropology, human rights, belonging.Mark Goodale - 2020 - In Danielle Celermajer & Alexandre Lefebvre (eds.), The subject of human rights. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
     
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