Friday, October 17, 2008
"Human Rights as Morality, Human Rights as Law"
I hope this paper, which I posted to SSRN last month, will be of interest to some MOJ-readers.
Here's the abstract, followed by a link to the SSRN page where the paper can be downloaded/printed.
There has been growing interest in, and scholarly attention to, issues
and questions that arise within the subject matter domain we may call
"human rights theory". See, in particular, Amartya Sen, "Elements of a
Theory of Human Rights," 32 Philosophy & Public Affairs 315 (2004);
James W. Nickel, Making Sense of Human Rights (rev. ed. 2006); Michael
J. Perry, Toward a Theory of Human Rights: Religion, Law, Courts
(2007); James Griffin, On Human Rights (2008); Nicholas Wolterstorff,
Justice: Rights and Wrongs (2008). This essay - a version of which will
appear in a multi-authored collection of essays to be published by
Oxford University Press in 2009 - is intended as a contribution to
human rights theory. These are the principal questions, or sets of
questions, I address in the essay:
1.
What is the morality of human rights - by which I mean the morality
that, according to the International Bill of Human Rights, is the
principal warrant for the law of human rights?
2. How does the morality of human rights warrant the law of human rights?
3.
Some human-rights-claims are legal claims, but some are moral claims,
and some are both. What does a human-rights-claim of the legal sort
mean? A human-rights-claim of the moral sort? And when does it make
sense to think of a right that only some human beings have - children,
for example - as a human right?
4. Is there a plausible secular ground for the morality of human rights?
5.
At the end of the proverbial day, what difference does it make - why
should we care - if there is no plausible secular ground for the
morality of human rights?
Now, the link: here.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2008/10/human-rights-as.html