In this paper I raise some questions about the familiar claim, recently reiterated by James Griffin, that human rights are rights that humans have 'simply in virtue of being human'. I ask, in particular, how we are to read the words 'simply in virtue of'. Are we speaking of who has the rights (A has them if and only if he or she is human) or why they have the rights (A has them because and only because he or she is human)? Griffin brings the two readings together, as two sides of the same coin. He offers a (more or less) universalistic case for (more or less) universalistic rights. I try to show how the two readings can be driven apart, how the universality of human rights need not be undermined merely by there being no adequate universalis...
What is and should be the scope of our appeals to human rights? To what desiderata should our theory...
In this paper, I argue that the contemporary human rights literature would benefit from a shift in f...
Human rights constitute a universal moral paradigm in the contemporary world. Paradoxically, their ...
It has become a commonplace that human beings possess human rights ‘simply in virtue of being human’...
In this chapter, I assume that human rights animate and underlie human rights practice, rather than ...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
The traditional understanding of human rights as divine or inborn is out of fashion today. Positivis...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
How can we make sense of the claim that human dignity is the moral ground of human rights? And what ...
Why should all human beings have certain rights simply by virtue of being human? One justification i...
How can we make sense of the claim that human dignity is the moral ground of human rights? And what ...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
What is the fundamental justification of the idea of human rights? In this dissertation I argue that...
The author points at the necessity to work out of universal conception of human rights and duties. I...
Despite the prevalence of human rights discourse, the very idea or concept of a human right remains ...
What is and should be the scope of our appeals to human rights? To what desiderata should our theory...
In this paper, I argue that the contemporary human rights literature would benefit from a shift in f...
Human rights constitute a universal moral paradigm in the contemporary world. Paradoxically, their ...
It has become a commonplace that human beings possess human rights ‘simply in virtue of being human’...
In this chapter, I assume that human rights animate and underlie human rights practice, rather than ...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
The traditional understanding of human rights as divine or inborn is out of fashion today. Positivis...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
How can we make sense of the claim that human dignity is the moral ground of human rights? And what ...
Why should all human beings have certain rights simply by virtue of being human? One justification i...
How can we make sense of the claim that human dignity is the moral ground of human rights? And what ...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
What is the fundamental justification of the idea of human rights? In this dissertation I argue that...
The author points at the necessity to work out of universal conception of human rights and duties. I...
Despite the prevalence of human rights discourse, the very idea or concept of a human right remains ...
What is and should be the scope of our appeals to human rights? To what desiderata should our theory...
In this paper, I argue that the contemporary human rights literature would benefit from a shift in f...
Human rights constitute a universal moral paradigm in the contemporary world. Paradoxically, their ...