The Meanings of Rights: The Philosophy And Social Theory Of Human Rights
Cambridge University Press, 5/1/2014
EAN 9781107679597, ISBN10: 1107679591
Paperback, 338 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Does the apparent victory, universality and ubiquity of the idea of rights indicate that such rights have transcended all conflicts of interests and moved beyond the presumption that it is the clash of ideas that drives culture? Or has the rhetorical triumph of rights not been replicated in reality? The contributors to this book answer these questions in the context of an increasing wealth gap between the metropolitan elites and the rest, a chasm in income and chances between the rich and the poor, and walls which divide the comfortable middle classes from the 'underclass'. Why do these inequalities persist in our supposed human rights-abiding societies? In seeking to address the foundations, genealogies, meaning and impact of rights, this book captures some of the energy, breadth, power and paradoxes that make deployment of the language of human rights such an essential but changeable part of so many of our contemporary discourses.
Introduction Conor Gearty and Costas Douzinas
Part I. Finding Foundations
1. On human rights
two simple remarks Jean-Luc Nancy (translated by Gilbert Leung)
2. Human rights
the necessary quest for foundations Conor Gearty
3. Against human rights
liberty in the western tradition John Milbank
4. Religious faith and human rights Rowan Williams
Part II. Law, Rights and Revolution
5. Philosophy and the right to resistance Costas Douzinas
6. On a radical politics for human rights Illan Rua Wall
7. Fanon today Drucilla Cornell
8. Race and the value of the human Paul Gilroy
Part III. Rights, Justice, Politics
9. From 'human rights' to 'life rights' Walter D. Mignolo
10. Democracy, human rights and cosmopolitanism
an agonistic approach Chantal Mouffe
11. Plural cosmopolitanisms and the origins of human rights Samuel Moyn
Part IV. Rights and Power
12. Second-generation rights as biopolitical rights Pheng Cheah
13. History, normativity, and rights Paul Patton
14. 'All of us without exception'
Sartre, Rancière, and the cause of the Other Bruce Robbins
15. However incompletely, human Joseph R. Slaughter
16. Welcome to the 'spiritual kingdom of animals' Slavoj Žižek.