Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Reflections on Dialogues between Practitioners and Theorists of Human Rights
- SECTION I NORTHERN INGOs AND SOUTHERN AID RECIPIENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF UNEQUAL POWER
- SECTION II INGOs AND GOVERNMENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH STATES THAT RESTRICT THE ACTIVITIES OF INGOs
- 5 Dilemmas Facing NGOs in Coalition-Occupied Iraq
- 6 Human Rights in Action: Supporting Human Rights Work in Authoritarian Countries
- 7 Driving without a Map: Implementing Legal Projects in China Aimed at Improving Human Rights
- 8 Normative Compliance and Hard Bargaining: INGOs and China's Response to International Human Rights Criticism
- SECTION III INGOs AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH GLOBAL POVERTY
- Conclusion: INGOs as Collective Mobilization of Transnational Solidarity: Implications for Human Rights Work at the United Nations
- Index
7 - Driving without a Map: Implementing Legal Projects in China Aimed at Improving Human Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Reflections on Dialogues between Practitioners and Theorists of Human Rights
- SECTION I NORTHERN INGOs AND SOUTHERN AID RECIPIENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF UNEQUAL POWER
- SECTION II INGOs AND GOVERNMENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH STATES THAT RESTRICT THE ACTIVITIES OF INGOs
- 5 Dilemmas Facing NGOs in Coalition-Occupied Iraq
- 6 Human Rights in Action: Supporting Human Rights Work in Authoritarian Countries
- 7 Driving without a Map: Implementing Legal Projects in China Aimed at Improving Human Rights
- 8 Normative Compliance and Hard Bargaining: INGOs and China's Response to International Human Rights Criticism
- SECTION III INGOs AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH GLOBAL POVERTY
- Conclusion: INGOs as Collective Mobilization of Transnational Solidarity: Implications for Human Rights Work at the United Nations
- Index
Summary
The idea that Western countries should combine a principled stand against abuses of human rights with “positive” measures to bring about change in the circumstances that cause those abuses is one that many countries have firmly embraced, especially those that commit the most resources to human rights endeavors. Inevitably, there is significant tension between the more traditional approach to human rights of “naming and shaming” and such positive measures, often provoking debate among various actors about the appropriate balance between the two approaches in particular cases.
Debate has been particularly heated over the way to deal with China in the period after the 1989 Beijing Massacre. Around 1997, the policy of most Western governments on China's human rights situation shifted toward greater engagement, including through positive measures, while in the face of reports of extensive violations of human rights in China, human rights organizations continued to insist that a more critical approach should be adopted. The Chinese government initiated the shift toward engagement, arguing strongly that any shortcomings in its rights record were due to the country's level of development, as well as historical and cultural factors, and thus the best approach would be one that would assist the country in its efforts to develop.
This chapter looks at the experience of the cooperation programs aimed at improving human rights in China through legal projects that have emerged from the post-1997 policy shift, with a focus on the work of a particular subset of international nongovernmental organizations (INGOs) that implement such projects.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ethics in ActionThe Ethical Challenges of International Human Rights Nongovernmental Organizations, pp. 132 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006