Govt-E 1048: Human Rights and International Politics
Spring 2016
                                 (version of April 4, 2015)
Instructor: Mathias Risse
Professor of Philosophy and Public Policy
209 Rubenstein
mathias_risse@harvard.edu
Office Hour: Tuesday 3-4
Location: Sever Hall, room 211
Class Days and Time: Wednesday, 5.40 – 7.30, and 7.40-9.40 pm [the class will be
taught in two sections; the content of both sections is the same]
Teaching Fellow for both sections: Kerstin Haase (khaase@fas.harvard.edu)
Course Description:
The idea of human rights has driven revolutions and progress for two hundred years. Its
history encompasses the abolition of slavery and the introduction of women’s rights as
well as our failure to prevent the Rwandan Genocide. It played a significant role in the
founding of the United Nations and has found a new relevance in the last two decades
with terrorism, torture and the interventions from the Balkans to Afghanistan. At the
same time, the universalistic aspirations behind the human rights movements have long
been attacked as ethno-centric, philosophically incoherent, and unrealistic. This course
explores the ways in which the rhetoric of human rights has evolved and how it can be
defended, and contrasts these themes with the political reality of human-rights-related
institutions and the difficulties facing actors charged with the realization of human rights.
The course is designed to provide practitioners, scholars, and policy-makers with a firm
grounding in the concepts and institutions of modern human rights, prepare them to
answer skeptics and critics (including skeptics and critics “on the ground”) and provide a
strong understanding of the practice of human rights, its failures and its many successes.
Part I involves an interrogation of the idea of human rights; Part II deals with questions
that arise about the realization of human rights.
                                             1
Prerequisites:
The course is open to all students. Some familiarity with history, political theory or
philosophy, comparative politics, and international relations will be helpful, but is not
required. No specific previous human rights experience or knowledge is required.
Required, however, is a willingness to engage with texts of different genres, including
texts from different academic disciplines. Readings range from case specific studies to
historical, legal, philosophical, and social-scientific text. Emphasis is placed on human
rights as an ethical and political framework for public policy, rather than as a system of
international law.
Course Requirements:
Students are required to come to class prepared to discuss the week’s readings.
Class participation counts for 15% of the final grade.
Short Written Assignments: For each class meeting, a written exercise will be posted on
the course website, and if you choose to complete this assignment, you must submit it
within a week of its posting (to the drop box on the course website). You are required to
satisfactorily complete three such assignments. They should not exceed 750 words.
These assignments count for 40% of your course grade. There must be at least two weeks
between submission of any two assignments, to assure a reasonable distribution across
topics. The questions that will be posted will normally be normative in nature. Responses
will involve sustained argumentation for a stance on a human rights issue. More
information about how to go about writing these papers will be provided.
Final Take-home Examination: The final exercise, which counts for 45% of your course
grade, will consist of essay questions that are to be answered in no more than 2,000-2,500
words in total (as specified). Examinations will be available on Monday, April 4, and are
due by 8 pm EDT on Wednesday, May 11. Examinations have to be submitted to the
drop box on the course website. Late examinations will not be accepted.
Reading and Assignments:
Required readings: readings packet (purchasing instructions will be posted as an
announcement on the course website)
                                            2
Part I: Interrogating the Idea of Human Rights
1. Wednesday, January 27: The Path to the Universal Declaration
The background to and the predecessor of the human rights movement: a brief history
	
  
       Universal Declaration of Human Rights (posted on course website)
       Johannes Morsink, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Chapter 1 (“The
       Drafting Process Explained”, 1999) (readings packet)	
  
       Paul	
  Gordon	
  Lauren,	
  The	
  Evolution	
  of	
  International	
  Human	
  Rights,	
  Chapter	
  7	
  
       (“Proclaiming	
   a	
   Vision:	
   The	
   Universal	
   Declaration	
   of	
   Human	
   Rights”,	
   2003)	
  
       (readings	
  packet)	
  	
  
2. Wednesday, February 3: Genocide and Crimes against Humanity
The different episodes of genocide throughout the 20th century have motivated the genesis
of a human rights regime, but also capture enormous failures in its realization.
       Genocide Convention (posted on course website)
       Adam Jones, Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction (2006), Chapter 1 (“The
       Origins of Genocide”) and Chapter 6 (“The Jewish Holocaust”)
       (posted on course website) (Click on “Text Excerpts” for Chapters 1 and 6)
       Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, [A/CONF. 183/9, July 17,
       1998], (New York: 2002), "Preamble; Article 1-33": (posted on course website)
3. Wednesday, February 10: Objecting to Human Rights – Realism
Realists doubt that human rights can be more than at best window dressing – and some of
them think human rights lead to harmful zest and moral self-righteousness
       Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War, Chapter XVII (Sixteenth Year of
       the War; the Melian Conference; Fate of Melos) (posted on course website)
       Thomas Hobbes, Sections XIII, XIV, and XVII of Leviathan (posted on course
       website)
       Nicolo Machiavelli, “Concerning Cruelty And Clemency, And Whether It Is
       Better To Be Loved Than Feared,” Chapter XVII of The Prince (posted on
       course website)
                                                         3
4. Wednesday, February 17: Objecting to Human Rights – Cultural Relativism
Is the human rights movement a contemporary version of Western imperialism?
       American Anthropological Association Executive Board, 1947, “Statement on
       Human Rights,” American Anthropologist 49: 539-43 (posted on course website)
       Mathias Risse, “Universalism vs. Relativism,” Chapter 2 of Global Political
       Philosophy, Palgrave Macmillan 2012 (readings packet)
       Makau Mutua, “Savages, Victims, and Saviors: The Metaphor of Human Rights.”
       Harvard International Law Journal 42, 2001, pp 201-245 (posted on course
       website)
5. Wednesday, February 24: Human Rights – A Philosophical Defense
One way of supporting the idea of human rights
       Immanuel Kant, Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, 406 ("If we have so
       far...") – 436 (“and of every rational nature.”) (readings packet)
       Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, Bundesverfassungsgericht Press
       Release No. 11/2006 (Feb. 15, 2006), “Authorization to Shoot down Aircraft in
       the Aviation Security Act Void,” pp. 1-5 (readings packet)
       Jens Timmermann (2007), Kant’s “Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals”. A
       Commentary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp 90-111 (readings
       packet)
6. Wednesday, March 2: Human Rights, Philosophical Defenses, Cont.
Other ways of defending the idea of human rights
       T.M. Scanlon, “Human Rights as a Neutral Concern,” chapter 6 of Scanlon, The
       Difficulty of Tolerance (2003) (readings packet)
       Joshua Cohen, “Minimalism About Human Rights: The Best We Can Hope for?”
       Journal of Political Philosophy, 12, 2 (2004): 190-213 (posted on course
       website)
                                          4
7. Wednesday, March 9: Reflecting on the Human Right not to be Tortured
Eradicating torture is a major goal of the human rights regime, but in recent years, as
part of the “war on terror,” the legitimacy of torture has come in for much debate
       Henry Shue, “Torture”, Philosophy and Public Affairs 7 (1978): pp 124-143
       (posted on course website)
       David Sussman, “What’s Wrong with Torture?, Philosophy and Public Affairs
       33, no. 1 (January 2005) (posted on course website)
       John Conroy, Unspeakable Acts, Ordinary People: the Dynamics of Torture
       (2000), chapter 8 (“Torturers”) (readings packet)
Part II: Realizing Human Rights
8. Wednesday, March 23: Human Rights: Treaties and Organizations
A survey of other human rights instruments and of some of the institutions and
organizations concerned with their realization
       David Forsythe, Human Rights in International Relations (2nd edition), 2006,
       Chapters 3 and 5 (readings packet)
       William Korey, NGOs and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: A
       Curious Grapevine (1998), Chapters 1 and 3 (pp 29-51 and pp 77-95) (readings
       packet)
9. Wednesday, March 30: Treaties – Do They Make a Difference?
Countries have lots of motives to sign up for human rights treaties – does it make a
difference to the extent of the realization of human rights?
       Thomas Risse and Kathryn Sikkink, “The Socialization of International Human
       Rights Norms into Domestic Practices,” introduction to Risse, Stephen Kopp, and
       Sikkink (eds.), The Power of Human Rights: International Norms and Domestic
       Change (1999) (readings packet)
       Beth Simmons, Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic
       Politics (2009), Chapters 4 and 9 (pp 112-159 and pp 349-381) (readings packet)
                                          5
10. Wednesday, April 6: American Exceptionalism
The US plays a rather peculiar, and unique, role with regard to the realization of human
rights.
          Jeremy Rabkin, “American Independence and the Opinions of Mankind,” Chapter
          9 of Law Without Nations (2005) (readings packet)
          Ignatieff, Michael, “Introduction: American Exceptionalism and Human Rights,”
          in Igantieff (ed.), American Exceptionalism and Human Rights (2005) (readings
          packet)
          Harold Hongju Koh, “America’s Jekyll-and-Hyde Exceptionalism”, in Ignatieff,
          American Exceptionalism and Human Rights (2005) (readings packet)
11. Wednesday, April 13: Dealing with Past Violations – War Crime Tribunals vs.
Truth Commissions
How should one deal with past violations? War crime trials are one way. Truth
Commissions are another.
          Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, pp. 3-20, pp. 257-298 (readings packet)
          Martha Minow, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History after
          Genocide and Mass Violence (1998), chapter 3 (“Trials”) (readings packet)
          Todd Landman, “The Social Science of Truth Commissions,” Chapter 7 of
          Landman, Studying Human Rights (2006) (readings packet)
12. Wednesday, April 20: Human Rights, Statehood, Self-Determination
Human rights of individuals, inviolability of states, and self-determination of peoples are
ideas that shape the international political system – but any two of these can conflict.
          Fernando Teson, “The Liberal Case for Humanitarian Intervention,” chapter 3 in
          J. L. Holzgrefe and Robert Keohane, Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal,
          and Political Dilemmas (2003) (readings packet)
   	
     David	
  Luban,	
  “Just	
  War	
  and	
  Human	
  Rights,”	
  Philosophy	
  and	
  Public	
  Affairs	
  
          (1980)	
  (posted	
  on	
  course	
  website)	
  
          Michael Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars (1977), chapter 6 (“Interventions”)
          (readings packet)
                                                            6
13. Wednesday, April 27: The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
       Amos Oz, “Between Right and Right,” in Oz, How to Cure a Fanatic (2002) 3-35
       (readings packet)
       Rashid Khalidi, Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National
       Consciousness (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997): Chapter 2:
       “Contrasting Narratives of Palestinian Identity,” pp. 9-33 (readings packet)
14. Wednesday, May 4: The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, Cont.
       Benny Morris, “Arab-Israeli War,” in Roy Gutman and David Rieff, Crimes of
       War: What the Public Should Know (1999), pp 28-38 (posted on course website)
       David S. Wyman, The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust
       1941-1945 (New York: Pantheon, 1984), pp. 311-40 (readings packet)