Human rights are often described as universal. In practice, they are shaped by law, power, and political choice.
In The State of Modern-Day Human Rights, William J. Manosh examines how U.S. human-rights policy evolved during the Trump era—and what that evolution reveals about the modern global rights system. Rather than remaining in abstraction, the book shows how human rights are defined, enforced, and selectively applied through legislation, sanctions, intelligence assessment, and executive authority.
Focusing on landmark statutory frameworks such as the Women, Peace and Security Act and the Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act, Manosh explains how human-rights commitments are institutionalized within U.S. government—and how those same frameworks can be expanded, narrowed, or weaponized depending on political priorities. Through detailed case studies including Venezuela, Xinjiang, migration enforcement, and transparency surrounding elite abuse, the book traces patterns of consistency, contradiction, and selective moral focus in contemporary human-rights practice.
Written for informed general readers and policy-minded audiences alike, The State of Modern-Day Human Rights does not argue that human rights have disappeared. It argues that they have become increasingly transactional—invoked, constrained, or sidelined as sovereignty, nationalism, and global power competition reshape the international order.
This book offers a clear-eyed guide to how modern human rights are actually practiced—not merely proclaimed—and why that reality matters now.