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On Human Rights
James Griffin
360 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-923878-1
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Hardback
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14 February 2008
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- Long-awaited study of the foundations of human rights
- Griffin is one of the world's leading moral philosophers
- Highly topical; recent international events mean that human rights are the focus of increasing attention
- Written for a broad readership in philosophy, politics, law, and beyond
- Essential reading for anyone with an interest in this controversial issue
What is a human right? How can we tell whether a proposed human right really is one? How do we establish the content of particular human rights, and how do we resolve conflicts between them? These are pressing questions for philosophers, political theorists, jurisprudents, international lawyers, and activists. James Griffin offers answers in his compelling new investigation of human rights. The term 'natural right', in its modern sense of an entitlement that a person has, first appeared in the late Middle Ages. When during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the theological content of the idea was abandoned in
stages, nothing was put in its place. The secularized notion that we were left with at the end of the Enlightenment is still our notion today: a right that we have simply in virtue of being human. During the twentieth century international law has contributed to settling the question which rights are human rights, but its contribution has its limits. The notion of a human right that we have inherited suffers from no small indeterminateness of sense. The term has been left with so few criteria for determining when it is used correctly that we often have a plainly inadequate grasp on what is at issue. Griffin takes on the task of showing the way towards a determinate concept of human rights, based on their relation to the human status that we all share. He works from
certain paradigm cases, such as freedom of expression and freedom of worship, to more disputed cases such as welfare right - for instance the idea of a human right to health. His goal is a substantive account of human rights - an account with enough content to tell us whether proposed rights really are rights. Griffin emphasizes the practical as well as theoretical urgency of this goal: as the United Nations recognized in 1948 with its Universal Declaration, the idea of human rights has considerable power to improve the lot of humanity around the world. It is our job now - the job of this book - to influence and develop the unsettled discourse of human rights so as to complete the incomplete
idea.Readership: Scholars and advanced students of political, moral, and legal philosophy; anyone with an interest in human rights
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James Griffin, Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford
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"Arguably the most significant philosophical meditation on human rights... [since] the Universal Declaration of Human Rights... Not only the most powerful, fully elaborated contemporary philosophical contribution to the topic, but also one that has put in place many of the foundations on which any future work should build." - John Tasioulas, Ethics "This book is a masterpiece... it will be studied for a long time to come" - Brad Hooker, Oxford Journal of Legal Studies "James Griffin's new book is a singular contribution to the philosophy of human rights. In it he defends his own well-thought-out account with great subtlety and ingenuity, but the exposition of his account and the discussion of the
important issues are so nicely structured and so clear and well-informed that the book could clearly be used as a text in an undergraduate course... At the same time, Griffin's exposition of his view is so subtle and nuanced and the arguments so careful and cogent that the book is an essential work for specialists in the field... his book shows that philosophers have an important contribution to make to the conceptual and moral issues that are at the heart of much ongoing discourse on the nature and content of human rights." - William J. Talbott, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews "James Griffin...modestly sees his book as an early contribution to a theoretical critique of modern interpretations of rights, but it is more significant than that. Academic,
intellectually demanding, clearly written and rigorously thought through...This is not a polemic but an important work of scholarly philosophy, one that may lead to a fundamental reappraisal of something that impinges ever more closely upon us. It is also one of those books that makes philosophy matter." - Alan Judd, The Spectator "This is one of the most thought-provoking works to be published on the subject in a long time." - The Commonwealth Lawyer
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Introduction
Part I: An Account of Human Rights
I: Human Rights: The Incomplete Idea
II: First Steps in An Account of Human Rights
III: When Human Rights Conflict
IV: Whose Rights?
V: My Rights: But Whose Duties?
VI: The Metaphysics of Human Rights
VII: The Relativity and Ethnocentricity of Human Rights
Part II: Highest Level Human Rights
VIII: Autonomy
IX: Liberty
X: Welfare
Part III: Applications
XI: Discrepanices Between the Best Philosophical Account of Human Rights and the International Law of Human Rights
XII: A Right to Life, A Right to Death
XIII: Privacy
XIV: Do Human Rights Require Democracy?
XV: Group Rights
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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