Charles Beitz has presented us with a new and novel theory of human rights, one that is motivated by a concern for the enforcement of human rights in modern international practice. However, the focus on states in his human rights project generates a tension between the universal aspirations of individual human rights and the vulnerable individuals who through rendition or state failure find themselves outside the international state system. This paper argues that Beitz and other theorists of human rights make a mistake when they define human rights in statist terms. The scope of a theory of human rights must include all human beings, even if not simply in virtue of their humanity. The aspiration for human rights to be political and not meta...
In the contemporary political world order that continues to be structured by the principle of nation...
Author's OriginalIn considering the human rights policies of a sovereign, a functional definition of...
AbstractThe historical progression of the idea of ‘Rights’ and ‘Citizenship’ are embedded in a narra...
Charles Beitz has presented us with a new and novel theory of human rights, one that is motivated by...
In this contribution, I challenge Charles Beitz’ account of international human rights law within hi...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
This article explores an alternative to the established dichotomy between philosophical (natural law...
The concept of human rights holds a distinctive significance in political practice, yet philosophers...
The article presents a reflection on Corradetti’s distinctive position developed in Relativism and H...
The growing body of philosophical literature surrounding the topic of human rights aims to give conc...
This paper defends several highly revisionary theses about human rights. Section 1 shows that the ph...
The human rights often are cited as an ultimate goal for the discipline of social science. It guides...
The traditional understanding of human rights as divine or inborn is out of fashion today. Positivis...
I do not believe in natural law. As a result, I find neither comfort nor security in the proposition...
In the contemporary political world order that continues to be structured by the principle of nation...
Author's OriginalIn considering the human rights policies of a sovereign, a functional definition of...
AbstractThe historical progression of the idea of ‘Rights’ and ‘Citizenship’ are embedded in a narra...
Charles Beitz has presented us with a new and novel theory of human rights, one that is motivated by...
In this contribution, I challenge Charles Beitz’ account of international human rights law within hi...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
This article explores an alternative to the established dichotomy between philosophical (natural law...
The concept of human rights holds a distinctive significance in political practice, yet philosophers...
The article presents a reflection on Corradetti’s distinctive position developed in Relativism and H...
The growing body of philosophical literature surrounding the topic of human rights aims to give conc...
This paper defends several highly revisionary theses about human rights. Section 1 shows that the ph...
The human rights often are cited as an ultimate goal for the discipline of social science. It guides...
The traditional understanding of human rights as divine or inborn is out of fashion today. Positivis...
I do not believe in natural law. As a result, I find neither comfort nor security in the proposition...
In the contemporary political world order that continues to be structured by the principle of nation...
Author's OriginalIn considering the human rights policies of a sovereign, a functional definition of...
AbstractThe historical progression of the idea of ‘Rights’ and ‘Citizenship’ are embedded in a narra...