STANFORD
UNIVERSITY PRESS
  
Cover of Faith in Rights by Amélie Barras
Faith in Rights
Christian-Inspired NGOs at Work in the United Nations
Amélie Barras


BUY THIS BOOK

September 2024
234 pages.
$70.00

Hardcover ISBN: 9781503610590
Ebook ISBN: 9781503640498

Request Review/Desk/Examination Copy

CITATION

DescriptionDesc.
Reviews
Excerpts and More

Faith in Rights explores why and how Christian nongovernmental organizations conduct human rights work at the United Nations. The book interrogates the idea that the secular and the religious are distinct categories, and more specifically that human rights, understood as secular, can be neatly distinguished from religion. It argues that Christianity is deeply entangled in the texture of the United Nations and shapes the methods and areas of work of Christian NGOs. To capture these entanglements, Amélie Barras analyzes—through interviews, ethnography, and document and archive analysis—the everyday human rights work of Christian NGOs at the United Nations Human Rights Council. She documents how these NGOs are involved in a constant work of double translation: they translate their human rights work into a religious language to make it relevant to their on-the-ground membership, but they also reframe the concerns of their membership in human rights terms to make them audible to UN actors. Faith in Rights is a crucial new evaluation of how religion informs Christian nongovernmental organizations' understandings of human rights and their methods of work, as well as how being engaged in human rights work influences these organizations' own religious identity and practice.

About the author

Amélie Barras is Associate Professor in the Law and Society Program at York University.

"Are international human rights religious or secular? Developments at the Human Rights Council, Amélie Barras suggests, attest to the limits of this question. Barras alternates skillfully between explaining the pragmatic ways in which a commitment to this binary persists in shaping possibilities at the Human Rights Council with a perceptive account of the limits of such interpretations and the political possibilities that emerge in the wake of their displacement. Her expert account of the Quakers' role in advocating for conscientious objection as an international human right powerfully illustrates this argument."

—Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Northwestern University

"This book offers an elegantly-written challenge: to disrupt the ways that we 'look' for religion and to question what it means to be a 'secular' space. In challenging these binaries, Barras renders visible how religion functions in complex and surprising ways through advocacy practices at the Human Rights Council. This is essential reading for all human rights scholars and practitioners."

—Andrea Paras, University of Guelph