The human right to health has been established in international law since 1976. However, philosophers have often regarded human rights doctrine as a marginal contribution to political philosophy, or have attempted to distinguish ‘human rights proper’ from ‘aspirations’, with the human right to health often considered as falling into the latter category. Here the human right to health is defended as an attractive approach to global health, and responses are offered to a series of criticisms concerning its demandingness
If human rights are "inalienable rights of all members of the human family", as is enshrined in the ...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
A right to health is one of a range of socioeconomic rights for which states accept an obligation un...
In the human rights discourse and practice the right to health has been and continues to be a conten...
The idea that there is such a thing as a human right to health has become pervasive. It has not only...
One would be hard pressed to find a more controversial or nebulous human right than the right to he...
Recognition that individuals and communities enjoy a human right to health has, progressively, come ...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
Human rights activists claim that healthcare is a human right and as a human right, individuals ever...
Codifying, and then implementing, an international right to health, health care, or protection is be...
Research on how to understand legally recognized socio-economic rights produced many insights into t...
The concept of human rights holds a distinctive significance in political practice, yet philosophers...
There is an enormous range of contemporary and rapidly expanding literature on human rightsthat perv...
The tendency to translate expectations and needs into the language of rights is a means of putting t...
If human rights are "inalienable rights of all members of the human family", as is enshrined in the ...
If human rights are "inalienable rights of all members of the human family", as is enshrined in the ...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
A right to health is one of a range of socioeconomic rights for which states accept an obligation un...
In the human rights discourse and practice the right to health has been and continues to be a conten...
The idea that there is such a thing as a human right to health has become pervasive. It has not only...
One would be hard pressed to find a more controversial or nebulous human right than the right to he...
Recognition that individuals and communities enjoy a human right to health has, progressively, come ...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
Human rights activists claim that healthcare is a human right and as a human right, individuals ever...
Codifying, and then implementing, an international right to health, health care, or protection is be...
Research on how to understand legally recognized socio-economic rights produced many insights into t...
The concept of human rights holds a distinctive significance in political practice, yet philosophers...
There is an enormous range of contemporary and rapidly expanding literature on human rightsthat perv...
The tendency to translate expectations and needs into the language of rights is a means of putting t...
If human rights are "inalienable rights of all members of the human family", as is enshrined in the ...
If human rights are "inalienable rights of all members of the human family", as is enshrined in the ...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
A right to health is one of a range of socioeconomic rights for which states accept an obligation un...