Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany

Thesis advisor: Devin O. Pendas === This dissertation shifts our understanding of 1970s human rights activism from a minimalist politics of salvation to a maximalist commitment to kindred spirits. Scholars see the 1970s as the time when the internationalist dreams of the 1960s disappeared to be supp...

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Main Author: Jiménez Botta, Felix A.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108145
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1081452019-05-10T07:37:01Z Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany Jiménez Botta, Felix A. Thesis advisor: Devin O. Pendas Text thesis 2018 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This dissertation shifts our understanding of 1970s human rights activism from a minimalist politics of salvation to a maximalist commitment to kindred spirits. Scholars see the 1970s as the time when the internationalist dreams of the 1960s disappeared to be supplanted by the salvation of a few over the transformation of the root causes of society's ills. By contrast, this dissertation examines West German activism on behalf of Latin Americans chaffing under military rule in the 1970s as a campaign of international political solidarity by different means. Faced with an environment hostile to transnational solidarity at home and abroad, West Germans of varying political doctrines and Christian confessions, as well as exiles from Latin America, embraced a common language of human rights as they pursued their political agendas. Its neutralist and humanitarian overtones made "human rights" discourses appealing to activists with diverging political goals. This dissertation reinterprets human rights activism as a continuation of internationalist commitments at a time when the foundations for transnational solidarity eroded. Grassroots embrace of human rights occurred during a tense state of securitization provoked by left-wing terrorism in West Germany. With the West German state increasingly unwilling to stand up for human rights on the international stage, especially for leftist victims, or accept them as refugees, grassroots solidarity activists were compelled to embrace a discourse that the state would accept. The Chilean and Argentinean cases--the most prominent instances of state-perpetrated abuses in 1970s Latin America--prompted leftists, left liberals, trade unionists, and Christians to advocate for the admission of political refugees and the imposition of economic embargoes and sanctions. Chilean and Argentinean exiles advocated for political change in their countries, but were forced to utilize human rights rhetoric to escape the stigma accorded to left-wing politics. Conservatives embraced human rights argumentation against the military regime in Chile when the wave of repression reached their political partners of the Christian Democratic Party in Chile. Lacking similar partners in Argentina, West German Christian Democracy did not demonstrate interest in conditions there. The West German government responded to grassroots advocacy with a minimalist vision for human rights protection that emphasized private negotiations on behalf of select individuals, which was abhorrent to many grassroots activists. The embrace of human rights by grassroots activists occurred in a highly contested process of political defeats and realignments. It was not a turn to a new utopia. Drawing on research in state and civil society repositories in Europe and the Americas, as well as oral interviews, this dissertation offers a window into transnational political activism between West Germany and Latin America in the 1970s. It shows how activists from the left and the right, as well as government officials, arrived at different definitions of human rights and diverging strategies for protecting them. 1970s Argentina Chile Germany Human Rights Solidarity Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: History. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108145
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic 1970s
Argentina
Chile
Germany
Human Rights
Solidarity
spellingShingle 1970s
Argentina
Chile
Germany
Human Rights
Solidarity
Jiménez Botta, Felix A.
Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
description Thesis advisor: Devin O. Pendas === This dissertation shifts our understanding of 1970s human rights activism from a minimalist politics of salvation to a maximalist commitment to kindred spirits. Scholars see the 1970s as the time when the internationalist dreams of the 1960s disappeared to be supplanted by the salvation of a few over the transformation of the root causes of society's ills. By contrast, this dissertation examines West German activism on behalf of Latin Americans chaffing under military rule in the 1970s as a campaign of international political solidarity by different means. Faced with an environment hostile to transnational solidarity at home and abroad, West Germans of varying political doctrines and Christian confessions, as well as exiles from Latin America, embraced a common language of human rights as they pursued their political agendas. Its neutralist and humanitarian overtones made "human rights" discourses appealing to activists with diverging political goals. This dissertation reinterprets human rights activism as a continuation of internationalist commitments at a time when the foundations for transnational solidarity eroded. Grassroots embrace of human rights occurred during a tense state of securitization provoked by left-wing terrorism in West Germany. With the West German state increasingly unwilling to stand up for human rights on the international stage, especially for leftist victims, or accept them as refugees, grassroots solidarity activists were compelled to embrace a discourse that the state would accept. The Chilean and Argentinean cases--the most prominent instances of state-perpetrated abuses in 1970s Latin America--prompted leftists, left liberals, trade unionists, and Christians to advocate for the admission of political refugees and the imposition of economic embargoes and sanctions. Chilean and Argentinean exiles advocated for political change in their countries, but were forced to utilize human rights rhetoric to escape the stigma accorded to left-wing politics. Conservatives embraced human rights argumentation against the military regime in Chile when the wave of repression reached their political partners of the Christian Democratic Party in Chile. Lacking similar partners in Argentina, West German Christian Democracy did not demonstrate interest in conditions there. The West German government responded to grassroots advocacy with a minimalist vision for human rights protection that emphasized private negotiations on behalf of select individuals, which was abhorrent to many grassroots activists. The embrace of human rights by grassroots activists occurred in a highly contested process of political defeats and realignments. It was not a turn to a new utopia. Drawing on research in state and civil society repositories in Europe and the Americas, as well as oral interviews, this dissertation offers a window into transnational political activism between West Germany and Latin America in the 1970s. It shows how activists from the left and the right, as well as government officials, arrived at different definitions of human rights and diverging strategies for protecting them. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: History.
author Jiménez Botta, Felix A.
author_facet Jiménez Botta, Felix A.
author_sort Jiménez Botta, Felix A.
title Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
title_short Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
title_full Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
title_fullStr Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
title_full_unstemmed Embracing Human Rights: Grassroots Solidarity Activism and Foreign Policy in Seventies West Germany
title_sort embracing human rights: grassroots solidarity activism and foreign policy in seventies west germany
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108145
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