Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Dress to Impress: Phenomenology and Materiality of Liberal Human Rights Fashion in Global Law and in Indonesia

Hamzić, Vanja

Authors



Abstract

This paper interrogates some phenomenological and material implications of the dominant liberal human rights discourse within the emergent realm of global law. Liberal rights are analysed here as a ubiquitous fashion of global lawyering, ‘an ethical lingua franca’ (Tasioulas 2007) in its commodified legal form, providing the template for economic and social regulation. This piece posits that it is important to ask what it means to wear human rights in legal lifeworlds: What kind of normative personhood does this peculiar outfit produce? Moreover, what sort of material residue does this worldwide trend leave behind, as the localised artefacts of its manifold impact on human communal experience? To answer these questions, the present piece looks into the various examples from Indonesia, retracing, inter alia, a domestic legal and philosophical concept of the self (aku) which seems to defy the perpetual crisis of subjectivity – predicted and partly described by Marx, Levinas and Foucault – which remains deeply rooted in the solitary model of liberal individualism and its vision of human rights.

Citation

Hamzić, V. (2011, September). Dress to Impress: Phenomenology and Materiality of Liberal Human Rights Fashion in Global Law and in Indonesia. Presented at The Phenomenology of Global Order: Inquiries into the Materiality of International Law, Centre for the Study of Colonialism, Empire and International Law, SOAS, University of London

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Conference Name The Phenomenology of Global Order: Inquiries into the Materiality of International Law
Start Date Sep 7, 2011
End Date Sep 7, 2011
Publication Date Sep 1, 2011
Deposit Date Sep 4, 2013
Keywords Global Law, Phenomenology, Human Rights, Neoliberalism, Marxism
Additional Information Event Type : Workshop