This innovative multidisciplinary collection brings together the latest research on human rights issues in the Asian region, by leading scholars with a deep familiarity with the languages and cultures of the region. The contributors bring a range of disciplinary approaches, or âways of knowingâ to the study of human rights: history, memory studies, gender and sexuality studies, cultural studies and translation studies. Issues canvassed in the book include linguistic rights, debates on prenatal testing, transnational campaigns for redress of past wrongs, campaigns for sexual rights, and modes of human rights advocacy in East and Southeast Asia. This book will be of interest to general and specialist readers in the fields of Asian Studies, cultural studies, gender and sexuality studies, legal studies and history.
This book was published as a special issue of Asian Studies Review.
Ways of Knowing about Human Rights in Asia is an innovative, multidisciplinary collection, which brings together the latest research on human rights issues in the Asian region, by leading scholars with a deep familiarity with the languages and cultures of the region.
This book was published as a special issue of Asian Studies Review.
1. Introduction: Ways of Knowing about Human Rights in Asia 2. Language Rights in Japanese Criminal Courts: Bridging the Gap Between Legal Professionals and Language Professionals 3. Debating Human Rights and Prenatal Testing in Japan 4. Queer Activist Intersections in Southeast Asia: Human Rights and Cultural Studies 5. Memory Studies and Human Rights in Indonesia 6. Memory of an Injustice: The ââComfort Womenââ and the Legacy of the Tokyo Trial 7. The Task of an Activist: ââImagined Communitiesââ and the ââComfort Womenââ Campaigns in Australia