Since the 1950s the importance of the language of rights in general and human rights in particular has grown at such an incredible pace that today it is perhaps the most prominent normative vocabulary in moral, political and legal discourses. Such an expansion has raised, however, many problems, driving it towards a critical situation in which there is a growing concern about the “devaluation” of “rights-talk”
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
Stephen May (2011) holds that language rights have been insufficiently recognized, or just rejected ...
This text will analyze the commonly accepted philosophical foundation of human rights, the internati...
Since the 1950s the importance of the language of rights in general and human rights in particular h...
Following the XVIII century Declarations, rights have progressively occupied the whole space of lega...
It has become trite to lament the proliferation of human rights claims.1 Worse still, it has become ...
Rights talk dominates contemporary moral discourse. It is also having a growing impact on the develo...
The aim of this article is to contribute to the discussion on the nature, scope and meaning of the c...
In a variety of disciplines, there exists a consensus that human rights are individual claim rights ...
Human rights have become an enormously useful tool in our time, and this for a variety of reasons. U...
The half-century since the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights\u27 has been famous...
Within the study of the philosophy of law, there have been long standing disputes regarding the natu...
In an increasingly inward-looking world governed by populist governments, existing theories of right...
This article articulates a neo-pragmatist theory of human rights by drawing and expanding upon the A...
Rights have become, in late years, a critical worry of legitimate scholars, just as of those engaged...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
Stephen May (2011) holds that language rights have been insufficiently recognized, or just rejected ...
This text will analyze the commonly accepted philosophical foundation of human rights, the internati...
Since the 1950s the importance of the language of rights in general and human rights in particular h...
Following the XVIII century Declarations, rights have progressively occupied the whole space of lega...
It has become trite to lament the proliferation of human rights claims.1 Worse still, it has become ...
Rights talk dominates contemporary moral discourse. It is also having a growing impact on the develo...
The aim of this article is to contribute to the discussion on the nature, scope and meaning of the c...
In a variety of disciplines, there exists a consensus that human rights are individual claim rights ...
Human rights have become an enormously useful tool in our time, and this for a variety of reasons. U...
The half-century since the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights\u27 has been famous...
Within the study of the philosophy of law, there have been long standing disputes regarding the natu...
In an increasingly inward-looking world governed by populist governments, existing theories of right...
This article articulates a neo-pragmatist theory of human rights by drawing and expanding upon the A...
Rights have become, in late years, a critical worry of legitimate scholars, just as of those engaged...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
Stephen May (2011) holds that language rights have been insufficiently recognized, or just rejected ...
This text will analyze the commonly accepted philosophical foundation of human rights, the internati...