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Magna Carta

The Formation of the English Common Law Law and Society in England from King Alfred to Magna Carta

Human Rights in the Media Fear and Fetish

Human Rights in the Media Fear and Fetish

This collection sets about untangling some of the knotty issues in the underexplored relationship between human rights and the media. We investigate how complex debates in political judicial academic and public life on the role and value of human rights are represented in the media particularly in print journalism. To focus the discussion we concentrate on media representation of the controversial proposals in the United Kingdom to repeal the Human Rights Act 1998 and to replace it with a British Bill of Rights. The collection is underpinned by the observation that views on human rights and on the proposals to repeal and replace are polarised. On the one hand human rights are presented as threatening and therefore utterly denigrated; on the other hand human rights are idolised and therefore uncritically celebrated. This is the ‘fear and fetish’ in our title. The media plays a decisive role in constructing this polarity through its representation of political and ideological viewpoints. In order to get to grips with the fear the fetish and this complex interrelationship the collection tackles key contemporary themes amongst them: the proposed British Bill of Rights Brexit prisoner-voting the demonisation of immigrants press freedom tabloid misreporting trial by media and Magna Carta. The collection explores media representation investigates media polarity and critiques the media’s role. | Human Rights in the Media Fear and Fetish

GBP 44.99
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The Human Rights Reader Major Political Essays Speeches and Documents From Ancient Times to the Present

The Human Rights Reader Major Political Essays Speeches and Documents From Ancient Times to the Present

The third edition of The Human Rights Reader presents a variety of new primary documents and readings and elaborates the exploration of rights in the areas of race gender refugees climate Artificial Intelligence drones and cyber security and nationalism and Internationalism. In the wake of the Covid-19 crisis it addresses human rights challenges reflected in and posed by global health inequities. Each part of the reader corresponds to five historical phases in the history of human rights and explores the arguments debates and issues of inclusiveness central to those eras. This edition is the most comprehensive and up-to-date collection of essays speeches and documents from historical and contemporary sources all of which are placed in context with Micheline Ishay’s substantial introduction to the Reader as a whole and context-setting introductions to each part and chapter. New to the Third Edition 60 new readings and documents cover subjects ranging from human rights in the age of globalization and populism debates of the rights of citizens versus those of refugees and immigrants transgender rights the new Jim Crow and the future of human rights as they relate to digital surveillance the pandemic and bioengineering Part I has been reorganized into three chapters: the Secular Tradition Asian and African Religions and Traditions and the Monotheistic Religions Part V has been significantly updated and expanded with the addition of an entirely new chapter — Debating the Future of Human Rights. Each of the six parts in the book is preceded by an editorial introduction and in four of the parts a separate selection providing the reader with a general background on the history and themes represented in the readings that follow Each part and several chapters conclude with new Questions for Discussion authored by the volume editor An extensive new online resource includes 62 key human rights documents ranging from the Magna Carta to the United Nations Glasgow Climate Pact | The Human Rights Reader Major Political Essays Speeches and Documents From Ancient Times to the Present

GBP 37.99
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Olaus Magnus A Description of the Northern Peoples 1555 Volume III

Olaus Magnus A Description of the Northern Peoples 1555 Volume III

The Swedish scholar and prelate Olaus Magnus (1490-1557) last Catholic archbishop of Uppsala lived the latter half of his life in exile. His devotion to his country and his people never faltered nor his determination to give them a glorious place on the European cultural map by his writings. On his justly famous Carta Marina published in Venice in 1539 he promised a fuller account of the North and its marvels. This he accomplished in January 1555 when he issued from his own press in Rome his magnificent Historia de gentibus septenrionalibus. This quarto volume of 815 pages divided into 22 books and a total of 778 chapters was lavishly illustrated with some 480 woodcuts most of them closely relevant to the technical matters discussed by the author. The book was an immediate success and half a dozen editions appeared in the century after Olaus’s death. It became even better known in an epitome published in Antwerp in 1558 which was also frequently reprinted and translated. This appeared in English in 1658 but it is only with the present version complete with illustrations that the whole work is made available to the English-reading world. It is indeed only the second full translation to appear in modern times preceded a Swedish version published in four parts between 1909 and 1925. There is little history in the sense of chronological narrative in Olaus Magnus’s Historia. It is rightly regarded as an ethnographic essay on an encyclopaedic scale touching on a vast variety of topics snowflakes and sea-serpents elks and artillery sables and saltpetre watermills and werewolves. Much of it was culled from ancient authorities- it was a matter of patriotic pride to identify the Swedes as the only legitimate descendants of the Goths- but much of it was derived from the author’s personal observations especially those made on his early travels in North Sweden. His pioneering and sympathetic account of the Lapps and their way of life has attracted p | Olaus Magnus A Description of the Northern Peoples 1555 Volume III

GBP 38.99
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