"There is a struggle for the soul of the human rights movement, and it is being waged in large part through the proxy of genealogy . Samuel Moyn . is the most influential of the revisionists." --Philip Alston Praise for The Last Utopia "With unparalleled clarity and originality, Moyn's hard-hitting, radically revisionist, and persuasive history of human rights provides a bracing historical reconstruction with which scholars, activists, lawyers and anyone interested in the fate of the human rights movement today will have to grapple."--Mark Mazower, author of No Enchanted Palace: The End of Imperialism and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations "A most welcome book, The Last Utopia is a clear-eyed account of the origins of 'human rights': the best we have."--Tony Judt, author of Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 "[Moyn] argues elegantly and forcefully that the dominance of the nation-state in rights thinking made it impossible for the creators of the UN, the protagonists of the Cold War, and the participants in decolonization to conceptualize a world built on individual rights. This view emerged only in the 1970s, creating an entirely new, morality-based utopianism that was unimaginable until previously existing utopian notions no longer seemed plausible. The book, a triumph of originality, scholarship, concision, and bold conceptualization, has a superb bibliographical essay and will be wonderful to teach.
A genuinely thrilling account of the modern history of human rights."--S.N. Katz, Choice "Samuel Moyn's The Last Utopia is a major contribution to the history of twentieth-century human rights, but at the same time a salutary inquiry into the tensions between the rights of citizens as members of sovereign nation-states and the post-national or extra-national rights claims of humans. Moyn has produced a rich, fertile and challenging study of the modern history of rights. Moyn has shown that the history of human rights was a precarious, contingent, protracted and uneven development. If natural rights died as a consequence of secularization, can human rights decline with the erosion of Western liberalism and the securitization of the modern state? With the rise and fall of utopian dreams, academic opinions about the prospects of human rights may differ--however, from now on taking rights seriously means reading Moyn seriously."--Bryan S.
Turner, Contemporary Sociology.