Against the background of the largely theoretical debate concerning the use and potential abuse of the cultural relativism argument by State elites, this article seeks to explore how, if at all, the cultural relativism argument is actually being deployed in practice by state delegates appearing before the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child. Based on the evidence from this analysis, it is contended that "cultural difference" remains a common and formidable argument but that the dynamics of this argument, as played out before the Committee, simply reflect the inherent limitations and fundamental weaknesses of an international legal system founded on a "society of States" in which the voices of the local and particular are effectively sil...
Human rights doctrine is criticized because of its Western origin. It is suspected of being a powerf...
This thesis explores the United Nations’ human rights monitoring mechanism, the Universal Periodic R...
Universal human rights and particular cultural identities, which are relativistic by nature, seem to...
This paper seeks to analyse whether the Convention on the Rights of the Child, its text and its mon...
The Universalism-Cultural Relativism debate proceeds on the assumption that international human ri...
"Defensive Relativism describes how governments around the world use cultural relativism in legal ar...
I will argue that cultural relativism cannot be reconciled with the recognition in international law...
Thoko Kaime’s 'The Convention on the Rights of the Child: A Cultural Legitimacy Critique' looks at t...
Ever since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 there has been a debate...
This book has the purpose of investigating the impact played by culture in the contemporary dynamics...
This Article seeks to provide a new framework, rooted in classical liberalism, for understanding and...
This article presents a critical analysis of the UN Human Rights Council’s (HRC) engagement with the...
Debates on the universality of human rights and cultural relativism seem to be eternal and will cont...
The global human rights regime, rooted in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, nurtures a rela...
This Working Paper aims to offer an up-to-date list of cultural relativist players and arguments wit...
Human rights doctrine is criticized because of its Western origin. It is suspected of being a powerf...
This thesis explores the United Nations’ human rights monitoring mechanism, the Universal Periodic R...
Universal human rights and particular cultural identities, which are relativistic by nature, seem to...
This paper seeks to analyse whether the Convention on the Rights of the Child, its text and its mon...
The Universalism-Cultural Relativism debate proceeds on the assumption that international human ri...
"Defensive Relativism describes how governments around the world use cultural relativism in legal ar...
I will argue that cultural relativism cannot be reconciled with the recognition in international law...
Thoko Kaime’s 'The Convention on the Rights of the Child: A Cultural Legitimacy Critique' looks at t...
Ever since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 there has been a debate...
This book has the purpose of investigating the impact played by culture in the contemporary dynamics...
This Article seeks to provide a new framework, rooted in classical liberalism, for understanding and...
This article presents a critical analysis of the UN Human Rights Council’s (HRC) engagement with the...
Debates on the universality of human rights and cultural relativism seem to be eternal and will cont...
The global human rights regime, rooted in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, nurtures a rela...
This Working Paper aims to offer an up-to-date list of cultural relativist players and arguments wit...
Human rights doctrine is criticized because of its Western origin. It is suspected of being a powerf...
This thesis explores the United Nations’ human rights monitoring mechanism, the Universal Periodic R...
Universal human rights and particular cultural identities, which are relativistic by nature, seem to...