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Why Human Rights? A Philosophical Guide


ISBN13: 9780367723071
To be Published: August 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £35.99



Why Human Rights?: A Philosophical Guide explores the three fundamental philosophical claims underlying the moral idea of human rights:

  • (1) Universal justice, and objections to it on relativist and diversity grounds. This question is integral to many human rights claims regarding, for example, gender discrimination, caning punishments, and child marriages in traditional societies, all of which assume justice can be global, not only local
  • (2) Human equality, and hierarchical moral status claims like caste. Moral status claims are also central to current controversies over abortion, assisted suicide, and animal rights, among others
  • (3) Individual rights, and collectivist counterclaims from utilitarians and communitarians. An example of this debate is the argument over American reliance on “enhanced interrogation” (torture), which juxtaposed the priority individual rights and national security

Because these issues lie at the heart of moral and political philosophy, readers will also obtain a broad appreciation of these disciplines and its leading theorists, including Mill, Kant, Rawls, Sandel, Nozick, Rorty, and many others. Written in concise, jargon-free language, this book presents a high-relief map of the philosophical foundations of the human rights idea at a time of mushrooming illiberal challenges to it.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Jurisprudence
Contents:
INTRODUCTION

PART 1: UNIVERSALITY, RELATIVISM, AND DIVERSITY:
Chapter 1. How are human rights universal?
Chapter 2. Relativist objections
Chapter 3. Diversity and indeterminacy
Chapter 4. The limits of skepticism

PART II: HUMAN EQUALITY AND MORAL HIERARCHIES:
Chapter 5. Human moral equality: the claim and its challenges
Chapter 6. Theories of moral considerability

PART III: INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND COLLECTIVE INTERESTS:
Chapter 7. The domain of rights
Chapter 8. Justifying rights
Chapter 9. Liberty, equality, and community: complements or competitors?

Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C

REFERENCES
NOTES
INDEX