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An Intimate Yet Anglo-Centric Account of a Renaissance Human Rights Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2021

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Abstract

In his well-researched biography, Mike Chinoy chronicles Kevin Boyle's life and career as a scholar, activist and lawyer, bringing to light his under-appreciated role in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland and the efforts to find a peaceful solution to the conflict, as well as his contributions to human rights movements in the United Kingdom, Europe and the world. Are You With Me? is an important contribution to the literature on the actors who have shaped the norms, institutions and operations of human rights. In its efforts to shed light on one man, the book offers a fresh alternative to state-centric accounts of the origins of human rights. The book offers a portrait of a social movement actor turned legal scholar who used the law to contest the social inequalities against the minority community to which he belonged and to push for a solution to the underlying political conflict, as well as revelations of the complex power dynamics between human rights lawyers and the social movements they represent. In these respects Are You With Me? also provides valuable insights for socio-legal scholars, especially those focusing on legal mobilisation. At the same time the book could have provided a fuller and more complex biographical account had Chinoy been geographically and linguistically comprehensive in selecting his interviewees. The exclusion of Kurdish lawyers and human rights advocates is noticeable, particularly in light of the inclusion of Boyle's local partners in other contexts, such as South Africa.

Type
Book Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Footnotes

*

Fellow, Hertie School, Berlin (Germany); kurban@hertie-school.org.

References

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31 EComHR, Gürdoğan, Müştak, Müştak and Müştak v Turkey, App nos 15202/89, 15203/89, 15204/89 and 15205/89, Decision (Friendly Settlement), 12 January 1993.