Human Rights and Broken Cisterns: Counterpublic Christianity and Rights-based Discourse in Contemporary England

  • Méadhbh McIvor

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Although human rights are often framed as the result of centuries of Western Christian thought, many English evangelicals are wary of the U.K.’s recent embrace of rights-based law. Yet this wariness does not preclude their use of human rights instruments in the courts. Drawing upon fieldwork with Christian lobbyists and lawyers in London, I argue that evangelical activists instrumentalise rights-based law so as to undermine the universalist claims on which they rest. By constructing themselves as a marginalised counterpublic whose rights are frequently ‘trumped’ by the competing claims of others, they hope to convince their fellow Britons that a society built upon the logic of equal rights cannot hope to deliver the human flourishing it promises. Given the salience of contemporary political conservatism, I call for further ethnographic research into counterpublic movements, and offer my interlocutors’ instrumentalisation of human rights as a critique of the inconsistencies of secular law.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)323–343
Number of pages21
JournalEthnos
Volume84
Issue number2
Early online date2-Jan-2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15-Mar-2019

Keywords

  • RELIGION
  • LAW
  • POLITICS

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