Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-2005
Keywords
Human rights, Ethnographic knowledge
Disciplines
Anthropology | Human Rights Law | International Law | Social and Cultural Anthropology
Abstract
Anthropologists engage human rights administrations with an implicit promise that our discipline has something unique to offer. The articles in this special issue turn questions about relevance and care so often heard in the context of debates about human rights outside in. They focus not on how anthropology can contribute to human rights activities, but on what anthropological encounters with human rights contribute to the development of our discipline. They ask, how exactly do we render the subject relevant to anthropology? Reflecting on some ways anthropologists in this field have dispensed care for their subjects, the authors highlight two modalities of human rights anthropology, co-construction and denunciation. Two key problems with these modalities are identified - their duplicative and iterative qualities. With reference to the contributions to this special issue, the editors make a case for a more ethnographically engaged anthropology of human rights. They emphasize disciplined description and disciplined engagement with the politics of the field as an ethical position for anthropology and as a means of reclaiming disciplinary relevance.
Recommended Citation
Jean-Klein, Iris and Riles, Annelise, "Introducing Discipline: Anthropology and Human Rights Administrations" (2005). Cornell Law Faculty Publications. 1306.
https://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/facpub/1306
Publication Citation
Published in: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, vol. 28, no. 2 (November 2005).
Included in
Human Rights Law Commons, International Law Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons