Articles and Essays by Mark Engler | Democracy Uprising

Subscribe box

Sign up to receive new articles and essays by email:





English Español





Mark Engler is a writer based in New York City and senior analyst with Foreign Policy In Focus. He is author of How to Rule the World: The Coming Battle Over the Global Economy (Nation Books, 2008).

An activist originally from Des Moines, Iowa, Mark also serves as a commentator for the Institute for Public Accuracy and for the Mainstream Media Project.

Click here for a longer bio of Mark Engler or for information about his upcoming events.



Mark Engler


Email Mark Engler: engler@ democracyuprising.com



Articles by Mark Engler appear in:

  • Dissent
  • Newsday
  • TomDispatch
  • The Progressive
  • San Francisco Chronicle
  • Alternet
  • In These Times
  • Salon.com
  • The Nation
  • Mother Jones
  • Christian Science Monitor
  • Progreso Semanal
  • New Internationalist
  • Dollars & Sense
  • Grist Magazine
  • Toward Freedom
  • Rebelión
  • UpsideDownWorld
  • Chicago Reader
  • Baltimore Sun
  • S. Florida Sun-Sentinel
  • Znet / Z Magazine
  • Seattle Post-Intelligencer
  • Truthdig
  • The Ecologist
  • CounterPunch
  • Des Moines Register
  • Utne.com
  • Asia Times
  • Sierra Magazine
  • TomPaine.com
  • Africa Week
  • Common Dreams
  • Progressive Populist
  • Left Turn
  • Labor Notes
  • Featurewell Syndicate
  • Albuquerque Alibi
  • Red Pepper
  • Vue Weekly
  • New Politics
  • The Catholic Worker
  • Independent Media Center
  • navigation
    OLDER ARTICLES | 2000-2001

    Email this article
    Journal of Religious Ethics


    Toward the 'Rights of the Poor' Toward the "Rights of the Poor"
    An Academic Article on Human Rights in Liberation Theology
    by Mark Engler
    Published in the Journal of Religious Ethics, Fall 2000 (Vol. 28, Issue 3)

    ABSTRACT:
    In this article, the author traces the response of liberation theologians to human rights initiatives through three distinct stages over the past thirty years: from an initial avoidance of the concept, to an early critique, and then to a nuanced theological appropriation. He contends that liberation theology brings a thoroughgoing concern for the poor and an innovative methodology of "historicization" to the discussion of human rights. In clarifying the treatment of human rights within a specific religious movement, the author also addresses larger questions about the specific role of human rights language. To this end, the article shows how liberation theologians have grappled concretely with the divisions among different "generations" of rights, various rights discourses, and diverse options for rights advocacy.

    KEY WORDS: historicization, human rights, liberation theology, rights discourse, rights of the poor

    Contents
    1. The Early Avoidance of Rights Discourse
    2. Emerging Criticism: Human Rights and the Logic of Imperialism

      2.1 Criticism of the United States
      2.2 Criticism of the notion of universal human rights
      2.3 Four dangers
    3. The Shift to Appropriation
    4. Appraising the Rights of the Poor
      4.1 Partiality for the poor
      4.2 The four dangers reconsidered
    5. Historicizing Ethical Analysis

    REFERENCES

    — Full article available upon request to Mark Engler.

    back to the top

    About Democracy Uprising Article Archive Home