The Riddle of Human Rights

Front Cover
University of Toronto Press, 2005 M01 1 - 273 pages
Published Under the Garamond Imprint

Available in the US through Prometheus Books.

Demands for "human rights" and resistance to their violation are rarely out of the news. Yet their definition is far from a settled matter, their legal status is quite varied, their uses and defence widely inconsistent between jurisdictions, and respect for them is blatantly limited. If it is held that all humans are abstractly equal in the possession of these rights, there is little agreement on anything else about them. The "human rights" of the United Nations? Charter and Universal Declaration contain a host of inconsis­tencies and a mixture of truths and untruths that contradict the assumptions of universality and timelessness.

Gary Teeple makes the case that "human rights" are peculiar to an historically given mode of production; they comprise the public declaration of the principles of the prevailing property relations. In that they are proclaimed absolute and universal is no different than similar declarations and beliefs about the nature of principles arising in different social formations. Although the tenets underlying "human rights" are distinct from pre-capitalist rights in several ways, there is one very significant distinguishing characteristic: implicit within them are goals that are qualitatively different from any relations yet realized in existing social formations.

 

Contents

The Diverse Origins
9
The Absolutes
21
The Contradictions
33
Rights Outside Capitalist Relations
73
The Curious Unanimity
97
The Future of Human Rights
119
Principles for the Future?
145
September 11 and the New Behemoth
167
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
213
Bibliography
245
Index
261
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Gary Teeple is a professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Simon Fraser University.

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