The half-century since the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights\u27 has been famously heralded as the Age of Rights and the concept of human rights described as the only political-moral idea that has gained universal acceptance. During the same period, however, both terms defining the subject-human and rights-have become increasingly contested. Informed by the emergence of identity-based political movements, critics have attacked the category human has as bearing the baggage of Western Enlightenment assumptions about personhood and community, inherently racist, sexist, and classist. Theorists across the political spectrum have criticized the concept of rights as indeterminate, destructive of political community and even...