000 01228cam a2200145 4500
100 1 _aBURKE Roland
245 _a'Real thinking':
_bAmerican human rights diplomacy and the Perils of Anti-Emotionalism, 1950-1980/
_cRoland Burke
260 _c2020
520 _aThis analysis investigates the place of emotion within the United States human rights diplomacy, arguing that a persistent and self-conscious aversion to 'emotionalism' shaped American engagement with human rights and humanitarian questions across the 1950s and early 1960s. For an extended period, particularly within the United Nations, an insistent emphasis on the rituals of 'reason' was a significant impediment to the effective pursuit of American priorities in the human rights sphere. Whilst few prior to the mid-1960s, moments where emotion was recognised and embraced as integral increased by the 1970s, demonstrating its potential to advance human rights policy.
650 _aUNITED NATIONS
_xUN
_xHUMAN RIGHTS
_xWORLD
773 _aDiplomacy & Statecraft :
_gVol 31 No 2, June 2020, pp.306-325 (115)
598 _aUSA, UN
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09592296.2020.1760036
_zClick here for full text
945 _i66571.1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c40718
_d40718