Reconstructing Human Rights
A Pragmatist and Pluralist Inquiry into Global Ethics
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:9th Jun '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
We live in a human-rights world. The language of human-rights claims and numerous human-rights institutions shape almost all aspects of our political lives, yet we struggle to know how to judge this development. Scholars give us good reason to be both supportive and sceptical of the universal claims that human rights enable, alternatively suggesting that they are pillars of cross-cultural understanding of justice or the ideological justification of a violent and exclusionary global order. All too often, however, our evaluations of our human-rights world are not based on sustained consideration of their complex, ambiguous and often contradictory consequences. Reconstructing Human Rights argues that human rights are only as good as the ends they help us realise. We must attend to what ethical principles actually do in the world to know their value. So, for human rights we need to consider how the identity of humanity and the concept of rights shape our thinking, structure our political activity and contribute to social change. Reconstructing Human Rights defends human rights as a tool that should enable us to challenge political authority and established constellations of political membership by making new claims possible. Human rights mobilise the identity of humanity to make demands upon the terms of legitimate authority and challenges established political memberships. In this work, it is argued that this tool should be guided by a democratising ethos in pursuit of that enables claims for more democratic forms of politics and more inclusive political communities. While this work directly engages with debates about human rights in philosophy and political theory, in connecting our evaluations of the value of human rights to their worldly consequences, it will also be of interest to scholars considering human rights across disciplines, including Law, Sociology, and Anthropology.
In sum, this book offers a fresh and original understanding on human rights and contributes to the reflection on the nature and role of political theory. At a time when the Humanities are asked to justify their own existence and to prove that they have impact on the practical world, this book answers this concern by suggesting interdisciplinary research on the role and meaning of human rights in actual political activity, and in the practices and ideas of the actors (in particular social movement and political activists) involved. * Davide Orsi,Review Reconstructing Human Rights *
Hoover's Reconstructing Human Rights is the one that is most emphatic about the need to understand human rights in terms of "a democratizing ethos of disruption and change" (2016:77). It is also the only book that discusses in detail how a collective political struggle can invoke human rights for the purposes of contesting "the coordinates of sovereign authority and political membership" (2016:148). * Ayten Gündoğdu, Journal of International Political Theory *
ISBN: 9780198782803
Dimensions: 241mm x 161mm x 20mm
Weight: 538g
260 pages