This essay addresses the cultural legitimacy of human rights norms in Bangladesh and suggests some strategies for Bangladeshi human rights advocates to effectively disseminate and strengthen human rights standards among their constituents. Abdullahi An-Naim argues that human rights will never be secure in a country until they are seen as culturally legitimate, and consequently human rights advocates in the Muslim world must work within the framework of Islam to be effective (1990, 15). Taking this idea as its starting point, this article draws on the idea of public reason and the development of politics in the West to suggest some ways that An-Naims imperative might be realized in practice.

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Cultural Legitimacy and Human Rights in Bangladesh: Strategies for Effective Advocacy
Matthew Tomm1
1University of Victoria, mctomm@uvic.ca
Citation Information: Muslim World Journal of Human Rights. Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1554-4419, DOI: 10.2202/1554-4419.1228, October 2011
Publication History:
- Published Online:
- 2011-10-12
Keywords: human rights; Islam; public reason; politics; rhetoric; advocacy


















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