TY - BOOK AU - White,Lucie AU - Perelman,Jeremy AU - Sachs,Jeffrey AU - Sachs,Lisa E. TI - Stones of hope: how African activists reclaim human rights to challenge global poverty T2 - Stanford studies in human rights SN - 9780804769204 AV - JC599 .S76 2011 PY - 2011/// CY - Stanford, Calif. : PB - Stanford University Press KW - Human rights KW - fast KW - Human rights advocacy KW - Africa KW - Case studies KW - Social rights N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Place to live: resisting evictions in Ijora-Badia, Nigeria; Felix Morka --; Commentary on anti-eviction and development in the global south; Duncan Kennedy --; Cultural transformation, deep institutional reform, and ESR practice: South Africa's Treatment Action Campaign; William Forbath, with assistance from Zackie Achmat, Geoff Budlender, and Mark Heywood --; Evictions at Nyamuma, Tanzania: structural constraints and alternative pathways in the struggles over land; Ruth Buchanan, Helen Kijo-Bisimba, and Kerry Rittich --; Freeing Mohammed Zakari: rights as footprints; Jeremy Perelman and Katharine Young, with the participation of Mahama Ayariga --; Stones of hope: experience and theory in African economic and social rights activism; Jeremy Perelman and Lucie E. White --; Long arc of pragmatic economic and social rights advocacy; Peter Houtzager and Lucie E. White N2 - "Many human rights advocates agree that conventional advocacy tools--reporting abuses to international tribunals or shaming the perpetrators of human rights violations--have proven ineffective. Increasingly, social justice advocates are looking to social and economic rights strategies as promising avenues for change. However, widespread skepticism remains as to how to make such rights real on the ground. Stones of Hope engages with the work of remarkable African advocates who have broken out of the conventional boundaries of human rights practice to challenge radical poverty. Through a sequence of case studies and interpretive essays, it illustrates how human rights can be harnessed to generate democratic institutional innovations. Ultimately, this book brings the reader down from the heights of official human rights forums to the ground level of advocacy. It is a must-read for human rights advocates, development practitioners, students, educators, and all others interested in an equitable global society"--Publisher's website ER -