This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and non-citizens within states. Adopting a sociological approach to rights it becomes clear that, even in Europe, the cosmopolitanization of law is not necessarily resulting in greater equality and justice. In fact, ‘actually existing ’ cosmopolitan citizenship is characterized by a proliferation of status groups that concretize new forms of inequality, including those of super-citizens, marginal citizens, quasi-citizens, sub-citizens and un-citizens. Far from inaugurating a new era of genuinely univer-sal human rights, in some cases cosmopolitan law may even contribute to the creation of conditions in which fundamental human rights are violated
ABSTRACT Sociological theories of cosmopolitanism address its development at different geographical ...
This paper explores possible solutions to the existing gap between human rights and citizenship and ...
Cosmopolitanism at the international level—the recognition of an international human rights regime—h...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
This article revisits the possibilities of the good international citizen (GIC) as a civilising agen...
Human rights are enshrined in numerous human rights documents produced by the United Nations, most n...
At the heart of the historic struggle over legitimate universal human rights are two questions: What...
Rhetoric often claims that the European Union (EU), in issues related to Justice and Home Affairs, h...
Cosmopolitan international relations theorists envisage a process of expanding cosmopolitan democrac...
This article takes issue with the common view that cosmopolitan normative commitments are incompatib...
The article deals with social rights enjoyed by non-citizens in European countries. The author argue...
Rhetoric often claims that the European Union (EU), in issues related to Justice and Home Affairs, h...
The paper aims at answering to two research questions: a. which standards of judicial scrutiny natio...
increasingly understood in post-national terms. Beyond academic debates centred on “denationa-lised ...
The paper aims at answering to two research questions: a. which standards of judicial scrutiny natio...
ABSTRACT Sociological theories of cosmopolitanism address its development at different geographical ...
This paper explores possible solutions to the existing gap between human rights and citizenship and ...
Cosmopolitanism at the international level—the recognition of an international human rights regime—h...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
This article revisits the possibilities of the good international citizen (GIC) as a civilising agen...
Human rights are enshrined in numerous human rights documents produced by the United Nations, most n...
At the heart of the historic struggle over legitimate universal human rights are two questions: What...
Rhetoric often claims that the European Union (EU), in issues related to Justice and Home Affairs, h...
Cosmopolitan international relations theorists envisage a process of expanding cosmopolitan democrac...
This article takes issue with the common view that cosmopolitan normative commitments are incompatib...
The article deals with social rights enjoyed by non-citizens in European countries. The author argue...
Rhetoric often claims that the European Union (EU), in issues related to Justice and Home Affairs, h...
The paper aims at answering to two research questions: a. which standards of judicial scrutiny natio...
increasingly understood in post-national terms. Beyond academic debates centred on “denationa-lised ...
The paper aims at answering to two research questions: a. which standards of judicial scrutiny natio...
ABSTRACT Sociological theories of cosmopolitanism address its development at different geographical ...
This paper explores possible solutions to the existing gap between human rights and citizenship and ...
Cosmopolitanism at the international level—the recognition of an international human rights regime—h...