Hans Ingvar Roth is Professor of Human Rights at Stockholm University. He has previously worked as Human Rights Officer for OSCE in Bosnia and Herzegovina and as Senior Advisor at the Ministry of Justice in Stockholm.
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Description
Preface Introduction PART I. LIFE AND TIMES Chapter 1. Peng Chun Chang's Early Life in China and Studies in the United States Chapter 2. Raising a Family, Theatrical Activities, University and Diplomatic Careers Chapter 3. New York and the United Nations Chapter 4. Chang's Multifaceted and Intense Life PART II. THE IDEAS BEHIND THE UN DECLARATION Chapter 5. Peng Chun Chang and the UN Declaration on Human Rights Chapter 6. Chang's Ideas About Ethics and Human Rights Chapter 7. Chang, Malik, and Cassin Chapter 8. Chang's Intercultural Ethics and the UN Declaration Chapter 9. Chang's Triumphs, Defeats, and "Blind Spots" Conclusion Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
"[A]n excellent book that made accessible an otherwise arcane subject to the general reader and specialist alike. Roth's book is a landmark study in its field and deserves a broad readership." (Connections) "This volume is an important addition to the literature on the history of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and also a fascinating biography of the complex, multitalented, cosmopolitan P. C. Chang (1892-1957)." (Choice) "In this unprecedented work, Hans Ingvar Roth casts a spotlight on the life and times of Chinese philosopher Peng Chun Chang, who has remained in the shadows too long-in spite of his signal contributions to the making of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948). Gathering much new evidence and insisting on Chang's relevance even today to a movement that seeks cross-cultural and global purchase, Roth has made a noteworthy contribution to the history and theory of human rights." (Samuel Moyn, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World) "A fine and deeply engaging book. P. C. Chang and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is quite the page turner, with a unique and novel angle into a much-researched topic, which is timely, both among practitioners and scholars, and Hans Ingvar Roth's approach fits well with the new generation of transnational historians of human rights." (Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen, Raoul Wallenberg Institute, Sweden)