human rights;
universalism;
Islam;
gender equality;
feminism;
grassroots movements;
INTERNATIONAL-LAW;
D O I:
10.1093/hrlr/ngaa025
中图分类号:
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号:
030207 ;
摘要:
Does practice demonstrate the legitimacy of international human rights law? This article explores this question via a case study of the women's rights movement in Iran. Current human rights sceptics question the system's legitimacy because of a lack of universality and an excessive top-down approach. However, the Islamic Republic of Iran has a remarkable community of grassroots activists. The bottom-up women's rights initiative of the One Million Signatures Campaign utilised human rights discourse in combination with local, indigenous values in pursuit of gender equality. The article argues-via the case study of this movement-that there is practical evidence to support a theory of human rights universalism, as positive human rights law empowers the existing subjectivity of individuals. The universal legitimacy of international human rights law does not primarily come from a global network dictating common values, but from members of civil society mobilising their status as rights holders.