Human Rights, biopolitics and discipline: the body and life in the field of the judicialization in the contemporary

Authors

  • Flávia Cristina Silveira Lemos Universidade Federal do Pará
  • Ana Carolina Farias Franco
  • Felipe Sampaio de Freitas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17267/2317-3394rpds.v8i1.2306

Keywords:

Human Rights. Biopolitics. Subject. Life. Judiciary.

Abstract

When we add the words "rights" to "humans," what human are we referring to and what lives do we leave out considering the power-knowledge relationships that exclude and hierarchize lives? When dealing with the history of human rights (DH) it is recurrent to use a continuous history, which conceives rights within an evolutionary line, related to a supposed expansion of human consciousness. From this lens liberalism conceived the so-called human rights as universal and alienable rights, which were progressively enacted into laws and became the basis of the legal order of Modern States. The disciplinary surveillance of the body and biopolitics as the government of the population in the name of health was born concomitant to the birth of the Modern State, offering a substrate to public and commercial law, to legal and punitive inflation of stock management, in the market of rights and life.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

  • Flávia Cristina Silveira Lemos, Universidade Federal do Pará

    Doutorado em História Cultural/UNESP, Mestre em Psicologia e Sociedade/UNESP, Graduada em Psicologia/UNESP - Profa. no depto de psicologia clínica/UNB, bolsista de produtividade de pesquisa CNPQ PQ2.

Published

03/28/2019

Issue

Section

Review Studies

How to Cite

Silveira Lemos, F. C., Franco, A. C. F., & de Freitas, F. S. (2019). Human Rights, biopolitics and discipline: the body and life in the field of the judicialization in the contemporary. Revista Psicologia, Diversidade E Saúde, 8(1), 99-107. https://doi.org/10.17267/2317-3394rpds.v8i1.2306

Most read articles by the same author(s)