The Liberal Project and Human Rights
The 'Liberal Project' aims to transform society in accordance with liberal values and practices. This volume argues that the United Nations regime on human rights is an attempt to realise this project on an international level. The authors provide an engaging theoretical and historical context for this argument, defining the concept of liberalism, its origins and evolution, and identify it as a universal value that constitutes the very essence of the international human rights regime. The book explores the possibility of a cross-cultural consensus on the issue being reached, but problems of sovereignty and nationalism are also discussed as potential obstacles to the Liberal Project's completion. This penetrating and insightful work will appeal to a wide range of scholars and students interested in liberalism and human rights from the fields of international relations, law, political theory and political philosophy.
- Provides a broad historical perspective in terms of both theory and practice
- Contains a sustained and rigourous theoretical discussion of liberalism and the liberal character of the UN regime
- A distinctive focus on the relationship between liberalism and nationalism, a subject that has received insufficient attention in other books on the subject
Reviews & endorsements
“Liberalism, assailed from all sides in the great political and legal debates of our time, is defended staunchly and deftly in this expansive and sensitive book. Charvet and Kaczynska-Nay combine their talents as political theorist and international lawyer, respectively, to produce a meticulous account of a human rights order embedded in the political practice of liberalism.”
Gerry Simpson, London School of Economics and Political Science
Product details
December 2008Hardback
9780521883146
446 pages
235 × 151 × 31 mm
0.83kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. Liberal Beginnings:
- 1. The contextual origin of liberal thought and practice
- 2. The Westphalian society of sovereign states
- 3. The growth of liberal universalism
- Part II. UN Regime on Human Rights:
- 4. The UN and regional declarations and covenants on human rights
- 5. The right of peoples to self-determination
- 6. Right to development
- 7. Women's international human rights
- 8. The implementation of international human rights
- Part III. Critique and Defence of Liberalism:
- 9. Western critiques of liberal human rights
- 10. Liberalism and non-western cultures
- 11. In defence of liberalism.