Emerging Threats to Human Rights: Resources, Violence, and Deprivation of Citizenship, edited by Heather Smith-Cannoy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2019. 288 pages. ISBN-10: 1439917191; ISBN-13: 978-1439917190. RRP: A$93.00, paperback.

Kelly Soderstrom
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Increased migration and forced displacement of people across the globe is a fact of our contemporary world that demands further attention from scholars. While traditional approaches to understanding the drivers of such migration have emphasised the political structures that incentivise and facilitate movement, contributors to Emerging Threats to Human Rights: Resources, Violence, and Deprivation of Citizenship, edited by Heather Smith-Cannoy, argue that a human rights focus is necessary to comprehensively investigate contemporary migration patterns and challenges. To this end, contributors to this book analyse threats to human rights as a driver for migration from three interrelated but analytically discrete sources: resource degradation, violence, and deprivation of citizenship. According to Smith-Cannoy, these emerging threats to human rights pose an existential threat, which, in line with Alexander Betts’ (2013) notion of “survival migrants,” drives displacement. Through an analysis of each threat to human rights, presented as separate studies organised by type of threat, the book ultimately concludes that variation in the extent to which each threat drives migration can be understood on a spectrum from low to high drivers of migration. Although there is little evidence that resource degradation through climate change is currently leading to mass migration, deprivation of citizenship and violence appear to be correlated with moderate and high levels of mass migration respectively. As Smith-Cannoy argues, “a core theme that emerges from this investigation is that there is value in looking across issue areas to understand threats to human rights and causes of migration” (257). Resource degradation is the first threat to human rights analysed in the book. The three chapters analysing this threat do so through examinations of the climate change–migration–human rights nexus; violations of the right to water by nonstate actors; and global trade-offs between environmental protection and human rights. The analyses in these chapters together present a multifaceted view of the relationship between resources and human rights, highlighting the structural threats to resource-based human rights in international law and accountability processes. While the chapters each contribute an interesting perspective to academic debate surrounding resource deprivation and human rights violations, there is little analysis of migration. Smith-Cannoy does provide a summary in the book’s concluding chapter that argues that such resource deprivation creates human rights threats, which in turn act as push factors for survival migrants. While this conclusion indeed has merit, the empirical evidence to support the argument is lacking in the associated chapters. Overall, the chapters on resource degradation lack analytical clarity. In chapters 1 and 3, an overreliance on normative arguments and circumstantial relationships between policy goals and environmental factors detracts from the explanatory power of the analyses. Similarly, the central assumption that environmental protection and human rights protection are mutually exclusive is problematic. However, the analysis of barriers to nonstate actor accountability in chapter 2 presents an innovative perspective on the structural challenges to holding actors accountable for human rights violations. The analysis and findings are thought provoking and undoubtedly contribute to academic literature on human rights. In order to analyse violence as the second threat to human rights, the contributors examine violence perpetrated on forced migrants in host states; continued violence after ceasefires; and the efficacy of transitional justice mechanisms (TJM) for increasing levels of human rights. The chapters together present a comprehensive analysis of militia and state-based violence and peace efforts as threats to
《对人权的新威胁:资源、暴力和剥夺公民权》,希瑟·史密斯-坎诺伊主编。费城:天普大学出版社,2019。288页。ISBN-10: 1439917191;ISBN-13: 978 - 1439917190。建议零售价:93.00美元,平装本。
全球范围内不断增加的移民和被迫流离失所是我们当代世界的一个事实,需要学者们进一步关注。虽然理解此类移民驱动因素的传统方法强调激励和促进移民的政治结构,但希瑟·史密斯-坎诺伊主编的《对人权的新威胁:资源、暴力和剥夺公民权》一书的作者认为,要全面调查当代移民模式和挑战,必须关注人权。为此,本书作者从资源退化、暴力和剥夺公民权这三个相互关联但在分析上互不相干的来源分析了作为移民驱动因素的人权威胁。根据Smith-Cannoy的说法,这些对人权的新威胁构成了一种生存威胁,这与Alexander Betts(2013)的“生存移民”概念一致,导致了流离失所。通过对每一种人权威胁的分析,本书最终得出结论,每一种威胁驱动移民的程度的变化可以从低到高的移民驱动因素来理解。虽然几乎没有证据表明气候变化导致的资源退化目前正在导致大规模移徙,但剥夺公民权和暴力似乎分别与中等和高水平的大规模移徙有关。正如Smith-Cannoy所言,“从这项调查中得出的一个核心主题是,跨越问题领域来理解对人权的威胁和移民的原因是有价值的”(257)。资源退化是书中分析的对人权的第一个威胁。分析这一威胁的三章是通过考察气候变化-移民-人权关系来进行的;非国家行为者侵犯水权;以及环境保护和人权之间的全球性权衡。这些章节的分析共同呈现了资源与人权之间关系的多方面观点,突出了国际法和问责制进程中对以资源为基础的人权的结构性威胁。虽然每一章都为围绕资源剥夺和侵犯人权的学术辩论提供了一个有趣的视角,但对移民的分析却很少。史密斯-卡诺伊在书的最后一章中做了一个总结,认为这种资源剥夺造成了人权威胁,反过来又成为移民生存的推动因素。虽然这一结论确实有价值,但在相关章节中缺乏支持这一论点的经验证据。总的来说,关于资源退化的各章缺乏清晰的分析。在第1章和第3章中,过度依赖规范性论点和政策目标与环境因素之间的间接关系削弱了分析的解释力。同样,环境保护和人权保护相互排斥的中心假设也是有问题的。然而,第2章对非国家行为者问责障碍的分析提供了一种创新的视角,探讨了让行为者对侵犯人权行为负责的结构性挑战。这些分析和发现发人深省,无疑有助于人权方面的学术文献。为了分析暴力作为对人权的第二大威胁,作者审查了东道国对被迫移民的暴力行为;停火后暴力仍在继续;以及过渡时期司法机制在提高人权水平方面的效力。这些章节一起全面分析了民兵和以国家为基础的暴力与和平努力对国家的威胁
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