This article explores the normative international relations theory of Mervyn Frost. Frost's unorthodox approach to questions of human rights offers a way through the political and philosophical morass that has often threatened to obscure the most pressing issues of our time. Significantly, Frost claims to able to ‘construct’ a background justification for international ethics that can unite the demands for sovereign autonomy with declarations of human rights. In doing so Frost attempts to offer an new understanding of universal ethics and thus of the role of human rights in international politics. Acknowledging the importance of this approach, this article examines two issues that arise from Frost's ‘constitutive theory’ and seeks to offer ...
This Article advances the thesis that international human rights law (IHRL) has strayed from its for...
The article presents a reflection on Corradetti’s distinctive position developed in Relativism and H...
Article first published online: 28 Sep 2011How should we understand the cultural politics that has s...
This article explores the normative international relations theory of Mervyn Frost. Frost's unorthod...
Mervyn Frost's restatement of his constitutive theory of international relations raises a number of ...
One of the most important issues facing the international human rights movement is the claim that hu...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
The end of the Cold War and the resulting search for newparadigms with which to understand the world...
It is now commonplace to declare that we live in an age of rights. Indeed, it is fair to say that th...
The growing body of philosophical literature surrounding the topic of human rights aims to give conc...
Scholarship on international human rights generally adopts two approaches. The normative approach fo...
This paper defends several highly revisionary theses about human rights. Section 1 shows that the ph...
Since 1948, the study of human rights has been dominated by legal scholarship that has sought to inv...
This essay, a contribution to the Boston University Law Review’s symposium on Ronald Dworkin’s forth...
This work sets out to critically reconstruct human rights as both an ethical ideal and a political ...
This Article advances the thesis that international human rights law (IHRL) has strayed from its for...
The article presents a reflection on Corradetti’s distinctive position developed in Relativism and H...
Article first published online: 28 Sep 2011How should we understand the cultural politics that has s...
This article explores the normative international relations theory of Mervyn Frost. Frost's unorthod...
Mervyn Frost's restatement of his constitutive theory of international relations raises a number of ...
One of the most important issues facing the international human rights movement is the claim that hu...
Human rights theory and practice have long been stuck in a rut. Although disagreement is the norm i...
The end of the Cold War and the resulting search for newparadigms with which to understand the world...
It is now commonplace to declare that we live in an age of rights. Indeed, it is fair to say that th...
The growing body of philosophical literature surrounding the topic of human rights aims to give conc...
Scholarship on international human rights generally adopts two approaches. The normative approach fo...
This paper defends several highly revisionary theses about human rights. Section 1 shows that the ph...
Since 1948, the study of human rights has been dominated by legal scholarship that has sought to inv...
This essay, a contribution to the Boston University Law Review’s symposium on Ronald Dworkin’s forth...
This work sets out to critically reconstruct human rights as both an ethical ideal and a political ...
This Article advances the thesis that international human rights law (IHRL) has strayed from its for...
The article presents a reflection on Corradetti’s distinctive position developed in Relativism and H...
Article first published online: 28 Sep 2011How should we understand the cultural politics that has s...