Bonny Ibhawoh is the Senator William McMaster Chair in Global Human Rights, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Expert-Rapporteur, United Nations Expert Mechanism on the Right to Development, UN-OHCHR and Founding Director, Centre for Human Rights and Restorative Justice
Education
Bonny Ibhawoh earned his MA in History from the University of Ibadan in Nigeria and a Ph.D. in History Dalhousie University Halifax, Canada. Ibhawoh was on the Killam Scholarship, one of the most prestigious scholarships given to doctoral students in Canada. His doctoral dissertation explored the tensions in imperial and anti-colonial discourses of human rights in Africa.
Bonny Ibhawoh is currently the Vice Provost (International Affairs) and professor of Global Human Rights and African Studies at McMaster University. He also teaches in the McMaster Arts & Science Program and the Institute on Globalization and the Human Condition. His scholarship includes studies in the history of human rights, the cultural relativism of human rights, the right to development and peace/conflict studies. He is also the author of several books on African History, Human Rights and Peace & Conflict studies including Imperialism and Human Rights ,[4] and Imperial Justice: Africans in Empire's Court,[5] and Human Rights in Africa (Cambridge University Press).[6] He is a contributor to the GIAZILO blog - a blog on "Human Rights, Social Justice and Peace."[7]
Ibhawoh is a critic of absolute cultural relativism in the interpretation of human rights norms. He has argued that the cultural relativist stance has been dominated by urban-based elites whose perception of "cultural legitimacy" focuses on the idealized and invented traditions of collectivism, definitive gender roles, and conservative patriarchy in the interpretation of moral values.[8] His book "Imperialism and Human Rights" has been described as "one of the first to explore the role rights performed during the process of decolonization of Africa."[9]
Honours
Ibhawoh is a recipient of the John Holland Award for Professional Achievement.[10][11]
Ibhawoh is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada,[12] and a United Nations Independent Expert on the Expert Mechanism on the Right to Development.[13] He is also the recipient of the McMaster Student Union Teaching Award and the Nelson Mandela Distinguished Africanist Award.
Bonny Ibhawoh has published several books, academic journals and conference papers on global human rights, imperialism, peace and conflicts in top-tier publications.
Imperialism and Human Rights: Colonial Discourses of Rights and Liberties in African History, (Albany, State University of New York Press, 2007) [Named American Library Association, Choice Outstanding Academic Title][14]
^Corinne A. A. Packer, Using Human Rights to Change Tradition: Traditional Practices Harmful to Women's Reproductive Health in Sub-Saharan Africa, Antwerp, Intersentia, 2002, p. 98
^Barreto, José-Manuel (2014). "Imperialism and Decolonization as Scenarios of Human Rights History," in Human Rights from a Third World Perspective: Critique, José-Manuel Barreto ed. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 160. ISBN978-1443840583.