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Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Ourselves, Facing History and.

Title Fundamental Freedoms : Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Imprint New York : Facing History and Ourselves, 2013.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (426 pages)
Contents About Facing History and Ourselves; Acknowledgments; Preface; Foreword; Part I: Who was Eleanor Roosevelt?; Introduction; Self-Annihilation; No Ordinary Life; Eleanor and Franklin; Independence; Women in Power; First Lady; A Utopia Softly Sketched; Racial Awkwardness; "A ... Mother Hen for All Rescue Agencies"; "Paper Walls"; Japanese Internment Camps; DOCUMENT 1: Becoming Eleanor; DOCUMENT 2: Refusing to Be "Frozen Out"; DOCUMENT 3: "The Basic Thing We Must Do Is to Stop Generalizing about People"; DOCUMENT 4: Marian Anderson and the Daughters of the American Revolution.
DOCUMENT 5: Eleanor and the Jewish Refugee Crisis (1939)PART II: World War II and the Birth of the United Nations; "What Are You Fighting For?"; A Lasting Peace; United Nations; "I Did Not Know Until I Saw"35; Hope and Rehabilitation; DOCUMENT 1: "How Much Democracy Do We Want?"; DOCUMENT 2: The "Four Freedoms" Speech; DOCUMENT 3: Eleanor and Wartime Race Riots; DOCUMENT 4: The Atlantic Charter; DOCUMENT 5: The United Nations Charter; DOCUMENT 6: "Naturally They Want to Go to Palestine"; DOCUMENT 7: Eleanor's Visits to the Displaced Persons Camps.
PART III: Negotiating the Universal Declaration of Human RightsUndertaking a New Mission; Individual and Society; A Tea Party with a Theme: How Universal Is Universal?; Beyond National Sovereignty: How to Protect Citizens From Their Own Government; Civil Rights as Human Rights; The Politics of Words; Adoption; DOCUMENT 1: Documents Reviewed by the Drafting Committee; DOCUMENT 2: The Individual or Society: The Human Rights Commission Debates; DOCUMENT 3: Statement on Human Rights by the American Anthropological Association; DOCUMENT 4: The Human Rights Commission and Blacks in America.
DOCUMENT 5: Social and Economic Rights: Eleanor's Speech at the SorbonneDOCUMENT 6: Magna Carta for Mankind; PART IV: The UDHR and its Legacy; The Universal Declaration of Human Rights; The Iron Curtain; "Where Do Human Rights Begin?"; Human Rights at Home; DOCUMENT 1: Drafting the Preamble; DOCUMENT 2: Reflections on Human Rights; DOCUMENT 3: Making History; Timeline; Index; Credits.
Summary Surveying Eleanor Roosevelt's early years and then concentrating on her life-long commitment as an activist, Fundamental Freedoms tells of Eleanor's pivotal role in creating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust. As demonstrated throughout all four parts of this resource, Eleanor was no ordinary person: she redefined the role of a first lady as she established her own career as a nationally-syndicated journalist and continually spoke out on behalf of the underprivileged. In 1945 after the death of her husband, President Franklin Ro.
Language English.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962 -- Political and social views.
United Nations. General Assembly. Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJkXqXcPkgQY7YmvwbTbVC
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (United Nations. General Assembly)
EDUCATION -- History.
HISTORY -- United States -- State & Local -- General.
Political and social views
United States - General.
Regions & Countries - Americas.
History & Archaeology.
Other Form: Print version: Ourselves, Facing History and. Fundamental Freedoms : Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. New York : Facing History and Ourselves, ©2013
ISBN 9781940457000 (electronic bk.)
1940457009 (electronic bk.)