1. The modernizing bias of human rights: stories of mass killings and genocide in Central America.
- Author
-
Ekern S
- Subjects
- Central America ethnology, El Salvador ethnology, Guatemala ethnology, History, 20th Century, Human Rights Abuses economics, Human Rights Abuses ethnology, Human Rights Abuses history, Human Rights Abuses legislation & jurisprudence, Human Rights Abuses psychology, Humans, Violence economics, Violence ethnology, Violence history, Violence legislation & jurisprudence, Violence psychology, Civil Disorders economics, Civil Disorders ethnology, Civil Disorders history, Civil Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Civil Disorders psychology, Ethnicity education, Ethnicity ethnology, Ethnicity history, Ethnicity legislation & jurisprudence, Ethnicity psychology, Homicide economics, Homicide ethnology, Homicide history, Homicide legislation & jurisprudence, Homicide psychology, Human Rights economics, Human Rights education, Human Rights history, Human Rights legislation & jurisprudence, Human Rights psychology, Language history, Newspapers as Topic history
- Abstract
This article analyses selected cases of mass killings and genocide during the civil wars in El Salvador and Guatemala in the 1980s and the way in which the truth commissions in both countries reframed locally grounded narratives to fit the state-centred language of human rights. Redefining wrongdoings as human rights violations produces stories that communicate poorly with local worldviews because the 'truths' that human rights language proposes disregard local realities and transform local conflicts into a type of 'modern', nationwide struggles. Thus, while the concept of genocide might capture well the horrendous nature of a mass killing, it will also ethnify the conflict. Comparisons between local readings and human rights-based reinterpretations reveal a 'modernizing' or 'Westernizing' bias of international law; the article argues for more awareness about such effects in analysis as well as in policy-making.
- Published
- 2010
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