Affiliation:
1. 1Faculty of Law and Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China; email: liusida@hku.hk
2. 2Department of Sociology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; email: sitao.li@mail.utoronto.ca
Abstract
This article presents a sociological perspective on understanding rights in China, examining the interplay between multiple myths of rights, rights abuses, and the politics of rights within various social and physical spaces. It highlights competing myths of rights held by the state, ordinary citizens, rights activists, and legal professionals. The article examines how rights abuses contribute to rights consciousness and mobilization across different human rights domains in a repressive political context. By analyzing the politics of rights in interconnected spaces, such as the street, the legal system, the global arena, and cyberspace, it emphasizes the importance of continuous engagement between domestic and overseas actors in shaping China's human rights future. The article encourages social science researchers to thoroughly examine the myths, abuses, and politics of rights before making normative judgments about China's human rights conditions.
Reference152 articles.
1. Authoritarian restraints on online activism revisited: why “I-paid-a-bribe” worked in India but failed in China;Comp. Politics,2014
2. Suicide as protest for the new generation of Chinese migrant workers: Foxconn, global capital, and the state;Asia-Pac. J.,2010
3. Mobilization without movement: how the Chinese state “fixed” labor insurgency;ILR Rev,2018