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<title>Shadi Mokhtari</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2011  All rights reserved.</copyright>
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<description>Recent documents in Shadi Mokhtari</description>
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<title>Mokhtari_CV</title>
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<pubDate>Wed, 25 May 2011 11:09:01 PDT</pubDate>
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<author>Shadi Mokhtari</author>


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<title>After Abu Ghraib: Exploring Human Rights in America and the Middle East</title>
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<pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2009 14:09:35 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This book traverses three pivotal human rights struggles of the post-–September 11th era: the American human rights campaign to challenge the Bush administration’s “War on Terror” torture and detention policies, Middle Eastern efforts to challenge American human rights practices (reversing the traditional West to East flow of human rights mobilizations and discourses), and Middle Eastern attempts to challenge their own leaders’ human rights violations in light of American interventions. This book presents snapshots of human rights being appropriated, promoted, claimed, reclaimed, and contested within and between the American and Middle Eastern contexts. The inquiry has three facets: first, it explores intersections between human rights norms and power as they unfold in the era. Second, it lays out the layers of the era’s American and Middle Eastern encounter on the human rights plane. Finally, it draws out the era’s key lessons for moving the human rights project forward.</p>

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<author>Shadi Mokhtari</author>


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<title>Towards a New Agenda for Islamic Feminism: Clearing the Human Rights Minefield</title>
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<pubDate>Fri, 16 Feb 2007 11:53:36 PST</pubDate>
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<author>Shadi Mokhtari</author>


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<title>The Iranian Search for Human Rights within an Islamic Framework</title>
<link>http://works.bepress.com/shadi_mokhtari/3</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 16 Feb 2007 11:48:38 PST</pubDate>
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<author>Shadi Mokhtari</author>


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<title>Human Rights in the Post-September 11th Era: Between Hegemony and Emancipation</title>
<link>http://works.bepress.com/shadi_mokhtari/2</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jan 2007 02:57:22 PST</pubDate>
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	<p>The post-September 11th era has presented immense challenges and disappointing setbacks for the advancement of human rights. Yet, the era has also been marked by complexity, paradoxes and ample opportunities for introspection as events expose contemporary human rights' various weaknesses and contradictions. This article provides an overview of the interplay between the human rights concept's various instrumental appropriations and its more autonomous emancipatory capacity manifested in post-September 11th developments. Instead of an exhaustive examination, the article simply poses and juxtaposes different dimensions and layers of the formidable presence of the human rights idea in post-September 11th developments impacting the Middle East. To this end, it places a particular emphasis on human rights' capacity to simultaneously aid, transcend and confront local and international power structures.</p>
<p>The article begins with a discussion of the ways in which American hegemony is both bolstered and challenged through human rights discourses after September 11th. It then turns to the Middle Eastern encounter with human rights amidst the American "War on Terror." It is argued that while widespread Middle Eastern consciousness of American appropriations of human rights foster cynicism about the promise and legitimacy of human rights, post-September 11th dynamics have also resulted in greater Middle Eastern engagement with the human rights concept and international human rights norms. In subsequent sections, the article presents a brief outline of the various challenges and openings presented for human rights advocacy in the last few years followed by a discussion of the renewed imperative for a genuine international human rights dialogue.  Throughout the article, examples are presented of how pre-existing human rights geographies and hierarchies ascribing relativism to the East and universalism to the West have been unsettled during this period.</p>

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<author>Shadi Mokhtari</author>


<category>human rights</category>

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<title>Editors&apos; Note to Inaugural Issue of the Muslim World Journal of Human Rights</title>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jan 2007 02:57:21 PST</pubDate>
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<author>Mashood A. Baderin et al.</author>


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