The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. Developing from Gewirth’s argument to the Principle of Generic Consistency (PGC) and Beyleveld et al.’s Principle of Precautionary Reasoning, I argue in favour of a capacity-based assessment of the task competencies required for choice-rights and certain duties (within the Hohfeldian analytic). Unlike other, traditional, theories of rights, I claim that precautionary reasoning as to agentic status holds the base justification for rights-holding. If this is the basis for generic legal rights, then the contingent argument must be used to explain communities of rights. Much in the same way as two ‘normal’ adult agents may not have equal rights ...
In recent human rights and legal instruments, individuals with impairments are increasingly recognis...
grantor: University of TorontoThe socio-medico-legal practice of assessing mental competen...
I argue that rights that protect our performance of roles are grounded in our interests in performin...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
The paper proposes a defeasible treatment of rights reasoning. First, I introduce a basic Hohfeldian...
In reference to Western cultures, some scholars (see Finkel & Moghaddam, 2005) have pointed out that...
I argue that one has a right when another has a normative constraint with respect to one. The fact t...
In this article, we offer an account of the epistemological and moral principles that should govern ...
Alan Gewirth’s claim that agents contradict that they are agents if they do not accept that the prin...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Just what is a right? Jakob Weissinger approaches this central problem of jurisprudence by criticall...
This article analyses the relationship between rights and capabilities in order to get a better gras...
This article analyses the relationship between rights and capabilities in order to get a better gras...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The aim of the book is to challenge liberal philosophical and legal traditions which ground personho...
In recent human rights and legal instruments, individuals with impairments are increasingly recognis...
grantor: University of TorontoThe socio-medico-legal practice of assessing mental competen...
I argue that rights that protect our performance of roles are grounded in our interests in performin...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
The paper proposes a defeasible treatment of rights reasoning. First, I introduce a basic Hohfeldian...
In reference to Western cultures, some scholars (see Finkel & Moghaddam, 2005) have pointed out that...
I argue that one has a right when another has a normative constraint with respect to one. The fact t...
In this article, we offer an account of the epistemological and moral principles that should govern ...
Alan Gewirth’s claim that agents contradict that they are agents if they do not accept that the prin...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Just what is a right? Jakob Weissinger approaches this central problem of jurisprudence by criticall...
This article analyses the relationship between rights and capabilities in order to get a better gras...
This article analyses the relationship between rights and capabilities in order to get a better gras...
The law’s cliff-edge approach to mental capacity denies those who lack capacity any right to determi...
The aim of the book is to challenge liberal philosophical and legal traditions which ground personho...
In recent human rights and legal instruments, individuals with impairments are increasingly recognis...
grantor: University of TorontoThe socio-medico-legal practice of assessing mental competen...
I argue that rights that protect our performance of roles are grounded in our interests in performin...