In 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights recognized the aspiration for everyone to enjoy freedom from want and particular economic and social rights. Sixty years after the proclamation of the Universal Declaration, it is important to review its meaning and its effects in the context of significantly different legal, political, economic and cultural landscapes. To approach this task, this article employs the unusual device of considering a Norman Rockwell painting of Freedom from Want. This painting, well-known in the United States, responded to the local wartime political culture, and depicted the private enjoyment of material security in patriarchal, consumerist and culturally uniform terms. This article employs the themes made e...
The demands for human rights being made today around the world are heir to all the great historic mo...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
There is probably no other topic in the field of human rights that is more difficult to talk about c...
This article explores the economic dimension of the Pursuit of Happiness in the Declaration of Indep...
Socio-economic rights, first articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) sixty y...
Presents the history of the 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, focusing on ...
This piece argues that although human rights is an ideology although it presents itself as non-ideol...
There is a great social importance of international, regional, state and practically individual char...
The article examines the concept of universalism of human rights, which came into prominence after W...
Within the U.S. policy discourse, it has long been taken for granted that the body of human rights l...
This article begins with a study of the political economy of welfare capitalism to demonstrate how t...
This thesis takes a ‘law in context’ and ‘history of ideas’ approach to examining the emergence, ela...
In August of 2000 the United Nations Sub-Commission on Human Rights approved Resolution 2000/7 -l d...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
Central to the rhetoric of human rights indivisibility is a belief in the fundamental equality of im...
The demands for human rights being made today around the world are heir to all the great historic mo...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
There is probably no other topic in the field of human rights that is more difficult to talk about c...
This article explores the economic dimension of the Pursuit of Happiness in the Declaration of Indep...
Socio-economic rights, first articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) sixty y...
Presents the history of the 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, focusing on ...
This piece argues that although human rights is an ideology although it presents itself as non-ideol...
There is a great social importance of international, regional, state and practically individual char...
The article examines the concept of universalism of human rights, which came into prominence after W...
Within the U.S. policy discourse, it has long been taken for granted that the body of human rights l...
This article begins with a study of the political economy of welfare capitalism to demonstrate how t...
This thesis takes a ‘law in context’ and ‘history of ideas’ approach to examining the emergence, ela...
In August of 2000 the United Nations Sub-Commission on Human Rights approved Resolution 2000/7 -l d...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
Central to the rhetoric of human rights indivisibility is a belief in the fundamental equality of im...
The demands for human rights being made today around the world are heir to all the great historic mo...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
There is probably no other topic in the field of human rights that is more difficult to talk about c...