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In: Human development, Band 39, Heft 5, S. 264-268
ISSN: 1423-0054
In: The national interest, Heft 62, S. 77-86
ISSN: 0884-9382
This article explores the meanings of human nature & human rights, noting that they have become confused & obtuse. People have come to think that what they are used to is natural & what they do not like is unnatural. They have forgotten that nature is neutral & that human rights today are aspirations, rather than needs. In its evolution, human rights have come to a stage where the collectivity has acquired human rights over the individual's rights. One of the major paradoxes surrounding the human rights issue is its centrality to foreign policy as part of a strategy to protect US national interest. E. Larsen
In: Human rights quarterly, Band 34, Heft 1, S. 88-112
ISSN: 1085-794X
This article warns that the human security discourse and agenda could inadvertently undermine the international human rights regime. Insofar as human security identifies new threats to well-being, new victims of those threats, new duties of states, or new mechanisms for dealing with threats at the inter-state level, it adds to the established human rights regime. When it simply rephrases human rights principles without identifying new threats, victims, duty-bearers, or mechanisms, however, at best it complements human rights and at worst it undermines them. A narrow view of human security is a valuable addition to the international normative regime requiring state and international action against severe threats to human beings. By contrast, an overly broad view of human security ignores the human rights regime; by subsuming human rights under human security, it also undermines the primacy of civil and political rights as a strategic tool for citizens to fight for their rights against their own states.
In: Global crime and justice
Virtually all countries in the world are affected by the scourge of human trafficking, either as a source, transit, or destination country, or combination thereof. While countries have long focused on international trafficking, internal movement and exploitation within countries may be even more prevalent than trans-border trafficking. Patterns of trafficking vary across countries and regions and are in a constant state of flux. Countries have long focused on trafficking solely for the purpose of sexual exploitation, yet exploitation in agriculture, construction, fishing, manufacturing, and th
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Human Smuggling and Human Trafficking" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Forum for development studies, Band 34, Heft 1, S. 9-44
ISSN: 0803-9410
In: Understanding Human Dignity, S. 615-630
In: Health and human rights, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 103-136
ISSN: 1079-0969
In: Law and philosophy library volume 141
What does it mean that human rights derive from human dignity? And what is the foundation of human dignity? How are human dignity and its foundation connected? Is the recent development of natural sciences dealing with human nature, like evolutionary psychology, relevant to these questions? The book addresses these points by connecting the discussion on the foundations of human rights with the recent claims regarding human nature made in evolutionary psychology, and with contemporary analytic metaphysics, especially the relation of metaphysical grounding. It offers in-depth insights into the so-called naturalistic approach to human rights, together with detailed proposals on how the approach could be truly naturalized in the philosophical sense. It shows how human rights and human dignity may have foundations in natural facts about human nature and offers a detailed analysis of how the "is" / "ought" gap problematic can be solved. The book also addresses the objection of Western ethnocentrism – unlike most of the contemporary philosophical accounts of human rights, which draw on highly individualistic Western concepts, it employs concepts like altruism and cooperation. .