Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann is a contemporary historian whose recent work focuses on human rights. He teaches at Berkeley, California, and between November and December he was a visiting guest at the Ciampi Institute in Florence.
Over the past two years, the world has witnessed an explicit scaling back of the use of human rights in international politics. Western governments increasingly disregard the human rights records of regimes, and the stark contrast in Europe’s responses to the Ukrainian conflict and to Gaza has made this attitude unmistakably clear to public opinion. This was not always the case. With all its ambiguities, in the decades immediately following the end of the Cold War, human rights were presented as the principle that guided and legitimized political decisions, sanctions, and wars. What has changed, and how has the way human rights are conceived changed in contemporary history, in the West and elsewhere, and across different phases of a history that began with the Atlantic Revolutions more than two centuries ago? Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann is a contemporary historian whose recent work focuses on human rights. He teaches at Berkeley, California, and between November and December he was a guest of the Ciampi Institute in Florence. We spoke with him about his field of research.
“What we are witnessing is the retreat of human rights as a topic of political debate. They are no longer invoked in the West; indeed, one might say they are ignored or relegated to the margins. Yet the issue of human rights resurfaces here and there, at particular moments and around different questions and concerns. In short, the idea is clearly in crisis compared to the 1990s, but it has not disappeared.”
Ukraine, Gaza, forgotten wars, international law trampled underfoot, the rule of law under attack. Has the evolution of human rights come to an end? Is this why it has become a subject for historians?
Yes. The idea of approaching certain phenomena from a historian’s perspective arises when we observe things— in this case, a concept— and realize that they have ceased to be self-evident and hegemonic. Contemporary reality seems to tell us quite clearly that we are looking in the rear-view mirror at the era of human rights. My starting point is the observation that, in the last ten to fifteen years, a historiography of human rights emerged, similarly to “global history.” Before then, these historical fields did not exist. Human rights, in other words, became an object of study for historians only recently. Historians, of course, always arrive last: political scientists, sociologists, and legal scholars work on these issues–human rights and globalization—since the end of the Cold War. But once something is no longer what Michel Foucault called an episteme—a system of rules that structures knowledge and defines which discourses are accepted within a sociopolitical system—once it is no longer taken for granted, it becomes an object of historical inquiry. This is where my interest originates. I believe we have reached the point at which it is possible to historicize the enthusiasm for human rights that characterized the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
Perhaps the backlash is also due to the decline of the idea of the West as the bearer of a civilizing mission after the disaster of the Second Gulf War and to the often hypocritical use of the concept. One need only think of the immense disparity between Western discourse on Ukraine and on Gaza: in one case, democracy and rights must prevail; in the other, glaring violations of international law are ignored. Today, a leader who speaks of human rights risks convincing no one, whereas thirty-five years ago the concept itself carried persuasive power. If the idea has not disappeared, the question is: where and how does it endure?
The “promise” of the continuous expansion of human rights reappears at various moments in history, in different forms and with different language. But the concept of individual human rights becomes central in global politics only after the end of the Cold War. In the 1970s and 1980s, “human rights” coexisted and overlapped with other moral and political idioms such as “solidarity,” and included competing notions of rights that were still deeply indebted to the legacies of socialism and anti-colonialism, as in the transnational movement against apartheid. It was only after the end of the Cold War that “human rights” emerged as the primary explanatory framework for understanding what had just occurred: the end of Soviet-style Communism and the breakdown of a bipolar world order post-1990.
This is very different from post-1945. In the aftermath of the Second World War, the idea formed part of the promise of an international order that would guarantee peace and make the recurrence of devastating conflicts such as the two world wars impossible. This idea was, in some way, implicit in all the founding documents of the United Nations drafted over the span of a few years: beginning with the UN Charter, followed by the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the 1951 Geneva Convention. The attempt was to guarantee the world an international order based on rules and to make wars of aggression impossible. This was the phase in which the first “promise” of an order in which human rights carried weight emerged. Then, in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, this United Nations–based “human rights internationalism”—if we wish to call it that—took on the promise of decolonization. In essence, human rights and self-determination became almost synonymous, liberation understood as the affirmation of the rights of all. Within a few years, postcolonial nations became the majority in the General Assembly and supported the 1960 Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. All contained the promise of self-determination. These, in a sense, are the two pillars of the postwar and post-empire international order: self-determination and human rights.
In the 1990s we enter yet another phase and another conception of human rights, which emerged after another collapse of the world order: the end of the Cold War. Especially in the West, this involved the idea of rights as exclusively individual, detached from what were seen as failed utopias of the “age of extremes,” to use Eric Hobsbawms title for his short history of the twentieth century: socialism, but also anti-colonialism.
Human rights as a promise that does not last long…
In my view, the idealism of human rights is not the cause but the consequence of the epochal ruptures of the late twentieth century. In many respects, human rights replaced faith in a different kind of utopia, which is why the Yale historian Samuel Moyn titled his book on human rights The Last Utopia. An utopia that promised individual rights on a global scale. The cracks in the promise of this last utopia begin to appear with the belated interventions in the 1990s in the former Yugoslavia or, conversely, the non-intervention in Rwanda. A turning point can be identified with the Nato-intervention in Kosovo in 1999, the very first war in the history of Nato and the first waged in the name of human rights, outside of international law. These “humanitarian” interventions paved the way for the aggressive interventionism of the United States after September 11, 2001, when the language of human rights was employed alongside the idea of exporting democracy, free markets and promoting regime change. It is in this phase that criticism of human rights grows, from both the radical right and the radical left, as well as from postcolonial legal scholars who exposed hypocrisies that had not yet dominated international politics in the 1980s and early 1990s. A kind of disillusionment and critique emerges, even within activist circles, raising questions about the actual place of human rights in the contemporary world.
What we have witnessed over the past five or ten years is what makes me reluctant to conclude that the idea has exhausted its role: much of the infrastructure for human rights, if we wish to use that term, is still standing. We have more NGOs engaged in human rights work on the ground than ever before in history; we have the international institutions and legal mechanisms created after 1945, as well as those established in the 1950s, 1960s, and the 1990s, such as the International Criminal Court. These institutions exist and continue to do their work. This form of human rights advocacy persists, and we also see growing grassroots activism that supports the return to a broader conception of human rights, including the right to housing, affordability, and health care. Today’s world is, in some respects, the most unequal we have seen since the 1920s, and these groups seek to adapt the language of human rights to establish normative standards and imagine a new promise, which includes new causes such as environmental rights.
One could say that the dominant discourse—with its share of hypocrisy and silences—has planted a seed or contributed to the language that continues to be used by those who fight for human rights, even as they recognize its cracks and contradictions.
One example is the link between human rights and revolutions. Human rights—then called the rights of man—gained political traction at the end of the eighteenth century. Why? Because in the case of the revolutions in the Americas, independence from empires had to be justified. And the only way to justify a break with imperial authority was to invoke a principle superior to monarchical power. In this case, human rights were a version of the older language of natural rights. What interests me less is retracing the long history of natural law that goes back centuries. What interests me is the question: when does this moral and legal language become politically operative? When does it become a catalyst for revolutionary change and for the creation of a new type of order? This occurred for the first time in the late eighteenth century during the American Revolution.