Contact Information
Biography Information
Hope Lewis, Professor of Law at Northeastern University School of Law and co-founder of its Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy, specializes in international law, including human rights. Her articles exploring race, gender, transnational migration, and culture appear in leading law reviews and journals on international law, race and the law, and gender and the law.
Professor Lewis co-edited Human Rights and the Global Marketplace: Economic, Social, and Cultural Dimensions (with Jeanne Woods, 2005), the first
Prior to joining the Northeastern law faculty in 1991, Professor Lewis served in the Office of Chief Counsel of the US Securities & Exchange Commission, where her responsibilities included the international regulation of investment funds. As a lawyer for TransAfrica Forum in the 1980s, she researched anti-apartheid legislation, African women’s economic and reproductive rights, and the history of African American internationalism. She currently teaches International Law, Human Rights and the Global Economy, and related courses. She received her A.B. in English and American Literature from Harvard-Radcliffe Colleges in 1983 and her J.D. from
Project Description
My project entails research and writing for a book on racial identity and migration through the lens of international human rights law. The working title of the book is Black Without Borders: Race and Migration in Human Rights Perspective).
The Fall of 2005 revealed yet another challenge for the international human rights legal framework—taking human rights seriously and making them work for African-Americans. The internal Diaspora resulting from Hurricane Katrina (and the governmental failures that accompanied it) reasserted the evident second-class citizenship status in which many poor and middle-class African Americans live. It reignited underlying tensions between working-class native-born Blacks and working-class Latino/a immigrants. It also renewed old arguments about whether or not African Americans should identify with Black human rights struggles in other countries given the need to “care for our own” within U.S. borders. Even the angry outcry over the erroneous labeling of Katrina survivors as “refugees” (technically, “internally-displaced persons” or IDPs) evoked a further sense of alienation and outrage. But many discussions of that sense of alienation did not fully surface questions about the nature of “foreign-ness” in American society. Those debates and tensions demonstrate both the need to see race, poverty, and other identity issues in international perspective as well as the need to do so in a contextualized way.
Finally, the essays in Black Without Borders will argue that the complex nature of Black migration is a central factor in its relative invisibility on the international human rights agenda. The book posits the need for theoretical and practical strategies that address the simultaneous forms of oppression that Black transnational migrants and IDPs experience. It will examine important case studies involving the status of female transnational household workers and caregivers from the English-speaking Caribbean, the human rights implications of Black transnational migration (“economic” and “political”) to the
Although Black Without Borders focuses on cases involving selected African Diaspora groups, the significance of the research extends beyond their particular social and cultural contexts. The book will employ insights from critical race and feminist legal theory that are in the process of transforming international human rights theory and practice. These theoretical approaches can identify weaknesses in the traditional legal framework that help explain why Blacks who cross geographic or political “borders” tend to fall through the cracks of human rights analysis.
