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| Funder | Swedish Research Council |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Lund University |
| Country | Sweden |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2023 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,095 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator |
| Data Source | Swedish Research Council |
| Grant ID | 2022-06205_VR |
The revolution in Haiti in 1791, when slaves rebelled against France and abolished slavery, has recently become a touchstone in discussions about the history of human rights. The objective of the study is to investigate whether the Haitian Revolution deserves to be included in this history.
It is motivated by deficient assumptions in ongoing debates that involves interpretations that stresses authoritarianism and inequality in the Haitian Revolution against arguments about the prominence of human rights.
As both approaches analyse rights as ideas in isolation from the movement dynamic of the revolution and apart from social conditions such as inequality, they conflate different archival sources.To avoid these limits, the study is based on social movement theory together with analyses of primary sources in the French archives and of social conditions.
Rights are studied in the movement texts of the Haitian Revolution – publicly announced texts in the movement’s name, which require support of the revolutionary base – as a part of its collective identity.
The collective identity is related to the movement’s origin, its collective acts and the repression it faced according to the method of process tracing.
By illustrating the strengths of the methodological design, the study offers an approach to human rights in general, focused on social movements and inequality, alongside contributions to the fields centred on social movement theory, the Haitian Revolution and human rights.
Lund University
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