
Making Human Rights Real.
Title:
Making Human Rights Real.
Author:
Spagnoli, Filip.
ISBN:
9780875865713
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (132 pages)
Contents:
Preface -- Introduction: Truth and Politics -- Chapter 1. Universal Rights -- Cultural Relativism -- ... Or Cultural Absolutism? -- The Relativity of Relativism -- Changing Cultures -- Inalienable, Natural and Legal Rights -- Citizenship and Asylum -- Chapter 2. Types of Rights and Interdependent Rights -- Economic Rights = Oxymoron? -- Hierarchy of Responsibility -- Big State -- How? -- "Suprema Lex"? -- Chapter 3. Limited Rights -- Balancing Rights -- Limiting the Number of Rights -- Chapter 4. Individual Rights and Equal Rights -- Individual or Collective Rights? -- Self Determination? -- Nationalism -- Equal Rights -- Chapter 5. Religious Liberty -- Limiting and Separating the State and the Church -- Communities and Identities Living Together -- Inclusive and Exclusive Norms -- Chapter 6. The Law -- The Rule of Law -- State and Society -- Chapter 7. Separation of Powers and Judicial Review -- Protection by the Courts -- Civil Disobedience -- The Justice System -- Chapter 8. Tolerance -- No Human Rights Without Tolerance -- The Benefits of Tolerance -- Tolerating Intolerance? -- Chapter 9. Democracy -- Political Rights -- Multi-Party and Two-Party Democracy -- Direct Democracy -- Democracy and Non-Political Rights -- Chapter 10. Sovereignty and Intervention -- New Sovereignty -- Intervention -- Globalization -- Chapter 11. Freedom and Equality -- Freedom vs. Equality -- Unlimited and Limited Negative Freedom -- Equal Freedom -- Freedom and the State -- References -- Appendix: List of Human Rights -- Index.
Abstract:
The most important characteristics of human rights are enumerated in a clear and concise discussion that analyzes the problem of making human rights real, and not just hypothetical, worldwide. Building on definitions of human rights used by the United Nations and other international bodies, and without being sidetracked by nettlesome discussions of specific troubling cases of rights abuses, the author describes the main characteristics of the system of human rights. He focuses on universality, interdependence, differences between types of rights, absolute or limited rights, the subjects of rights (individuals or groups), and the links between rights and the judicial system and between rights and democracy. He then discusses some of the instruments we can use to promote respect for human rights, the means by which we might make these rights real for a greater portion of humanity. Along the way, he analyzes some of the related controversies regarding sovereignty versus international intervention, globalization, and questions of cultural imperialism as they bear upon human rights. When do we have a right to impose rights Â- or to defend ourselves from intervention?. This systematic discussion presents a complex and difficult topic in an understandable framework accessible to the general public, and will stand as a useful foundation for readings of more specialized scientific, legal and philosophical works. Where most human rights books for the nonspecialist focus on specific instances of rights abuses, this work provides a more general approach focused on the logic in the system of human rights.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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