Friday, July 27, 2018

INEQUALITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS

Samuel Moyn, Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World (Cambridge, Massachusetts, & London, England: Belknap/Harvard University Press, 2018).  From the book jacket:
     In a pioneering history of rights stretching back to the Bible, Not Enough charts how twentieth-century welfare states, concerned about both abject poverty and soaring health, resolved to fulfill their citizens' most basic needs without forgetting to contain hoe much the rich could tower over the rest. In the wake of two world wars and the collapse o empires, new states tried to take welfare beyond its original European and American homelands and went so far as to challenge inequality on a global scan;e. But their plans were foiled as a neoliberal faith in markets triumphed instead.
     Moyn places the career of the human rights movement in relation to this disturbing shift from the egalitarian politics of yesterday to the neoliberal globalization of today. Exploring why the rise of human rights has occurred alongside enduring and exploding inequality, and why activists came to seek remedies for indigence without challenging wealth, Not Enough calls for more ambitious ideals and movements to achieve a humane and equitable world.