This essay reviews Professor Jamie Mayerfeld\u27s book, The Promise of Human Rights. I am sympathetic to the broad contours of Professor Mayerfeld’s argument. Nevertheless, this essay challenges portions of his account. Part One addresses the topic of international oversight. Mayerfeld makes a powerful theoretical argument in support of his claim that increased international oversight could help strengthen human rights protections in the United States. Here, though, I think his account omits some important information and gives insufficient weight to current political realities. Part Two focuses on what Mayerfeld calls the United States’ “self-exemption policy.” In brief, this is the U.S. policy of refusing to ratify most human rights treat...
As the United States moves toward the inauguration in January 2009 of a new President, greater att...
It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. Tha...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
This essay asks whether international human rights arguments are likely to be effective in advancing...
This paper analyses Jürgen Habermas’s claim that democracy and human rights are co-original and its ...
In scholarly discourse about rights, it is often assumed that democracy is bad for rights. Rights pr...
markdownabstract__Abstract__ As is widely acknowledged, the language of human rights, especially ...
This essay, a contribution to the Boston University Law Review’s symposium on Ronald Dworkin’s forth...
Human rights treaties play an important role in international relations but they lack a foundation i...
The United States prides itself on being a champion of human rights and pressures other countries to...
The United States practice of attaching a package of reservations, understandings, and declarations ...
Human rights and democracy have been regarded as a mutually reinforcing couple by many political the...
[Excerpt] Much ink has been spilt and hairs split in the battle between orthodox and political conc...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
As the United States moves toward the inauguration in January 2009 of a new President, greater att...
It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. Tha...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
This essay asks whether international human rights arguments are likely to be effective in advancing...
This paper analyses Jürgen Habermas’s claim that democracy and human rights are co-original and its ...
In scholarly discourse about rights, it is often assumed that democracy is bad for rights. Rights pr...
markdownabstract__Abstract__ As is widely acknowledged, the language of human rights, especially ...
This essay, a contribution to the Boston University Law Review’s symposium on Ronald Dworkin’s forth...
Human rights treaties play an important role in international relations but they lack a foundation i...
The United States prides itself on being a champion of human rights and pressures other countries to...
The United States practice of attaching a package of reservations, understandings, and declarations ...
Human rights and democracy have been regarded as a mutually reinforcing couple by many political the...
[Excerpt] Much ink has been spilt and hairs split in the battle between orthodox and political conc...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
As the United States moves toward the inauguration in January 2009 of a new President, greater att...
It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. Tha...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...