Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International / Edition 1

Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International / Edition 1

by Stephen Hopgood
ISBN-10:
0801472512
ISBN-13:
9780801472510
Pub. Date:
04/15/2006
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801472512
ISBN-13:
9780801472510
Pub. Date:
04/15/2006
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International / Edition 1

Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International / Edition 1

by Stephen Hopgood
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Overview

"If one organization is synonymous with keeping hope alive, even as a faint glimmer in the darkness of a prison, it is Amnesty International. Amnesty has been the light, and that light was truth—bearing witness to suffering hidden from the eyes of the world."—from the Preface

The first in-depth look at working life inside a major human rights organization, Keepers of the Flame charts the history of Amnesty International and the development of its nerve center, the International Secretariat, over forty-five years. Through interviews with staff members, archival research, and unprecedented access to Amnesty International's internal meetings, Stephen Hopgood provides an engrossing and enlightening account of day-to-day operations within the organization, larger decisions about the nature of its mission, and struggles over the implementation of that mission.

An enduring feature of Amnesty's inner life, Hopgood finds, has been a recurrent struggle between the "keepers of the flame" who seek to preserve Amnesty's accumulated store of moral authority and reformers who hope to change, modernize, and use that moral authority in ways that its protectors fear may erode the organization's uniqueness. He also explores how this concept of moral authority affects the working lives of the servants of such an ideal and the ways in which it can undermine an institution's political authority over time. Hopgood argues that human-rights activism is a social practice best understood as a secular religion where internal conflict between sacred and profane—the mission and the practicalities of everyday operations—are both unavoidable and necessary. Keepers of the Flame is vital reading for anyone interested in Amnesty International, its accomplishments, agonies, obligations, fears, opportunities, and challenges—or, more broadly, in how humanitarian organizations accommodate the moral passions that energize volunteers and professional staff alike.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801472510
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 04/15/2006
Edition description: ANN
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.62(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Stephen Hopgood is Professor of International Relations, SOAS, University of London. He is the author of Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International, also from Cornell, and American Foreign Environmental Policy and the Power of the State.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments1 Between Two Worlds
2 Shadows and Doors
3 Lighting the Candle
4 Telling the Truth about Suffering
5 Politics and Democratic Authority
6 Being and Doing
7 The Inheritors
8 Amnesty in PracticeAbbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Michael Barnett

Stephen Hopgood emerged from a year doing field research at the International Secretariat of Amnesty International with an incredibly insightful, complex, and fascinating interpretation of the organization. There are points of pure brilliance and sparkling insights, especially when he discusses how the tensions between the sacred and profane, moral and political authority, play themselves out in a changing environment.

Margaret Keck

This is a remarkable book. A fascinating and sensitive account of Amnesty International's organizational development, it is also a penetrating reflection on the practice and practices of moral and political authority, of the 'commodification of moral concern under globalization,' and of the possibility of universal values. How can AI govern itself, and on what basis does it make choices about its campaigns? How distant is the initial focus on Prisoners of Conscience from the statement that Guantanamo would be the gulag of our time? Throughout the narrative, Stephen Hopgood never lets the reader off the hook, presenting to us the strongest possible arguments for all sides of impossible choices so that by the book's end we are with him in trying to think through our own morality in the face of the quandaries he has opened up for us.

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