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E-raamat: Dignity and Human Rights: Language Philosophy and Social Realizations

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Is it impossible to assess dignity, which is the faculty or agency of autonomy and equality of rights under the current rule of law, when we are met by global challenges like climate change, financial crisis, food crisis, natural disasters, inequality, violent conflicts and trade disputes?

Drawing on European philosophical enlightenment to rethink dominant theories of contemporary Western Human Rights, Stephan P. Leher explores the philosophical foundation of the concept of dignity and Human Rights. Using specific examples from Africa and Latin America to explain these concepts as social realizations in the world, Leher demonstrates the link between justice and peace and contends that dignity, freedom and Human Rights law rule are social realizations and claims by all people. With the help of language philosophy, he argues that sentences and propositions about social choices and realizations of real life expressed in ordinary language constitute the basic elements of the foundation and protection of human dignity and Human Rights. The social choice to claim ones freedom and rights can be considered the dignity agency of the individual.

Dignity and Human Rights sheds new light on the academic assessment of dignity, the agency of autonomy and the equality of rights under the rule of law, in a time of changes and challenges to Human Rights policies and politics.

Arvustused

'Stephan P. Leher explains the concept of Human Rights, key to contemporary Political Theory, in a complex and systematic way. The book includes the most recent approaches and is of the utmost interest for different academic disciplines like Philosophy and Political Science, Legal Studies and Theology.' - Anton Pelinka, Central European University, Budapest

Acknowledgments viii
Introduction 1(4)
1 The End of History or the Beginning of a Human Rights History?
5(6)
2 Two Surprising Facts: There Are a First Case and a First International Court to Hold Defendants Responsible for Their Crimes According to the Rule of Human Rights Law
11(10)
3 The Individual Woman, Man and Queer Is the Subject of International Human Rights Law
21(15)
The Drafting Process of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
22(9)
Aspects of the Reception of the UDHR in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
31(5)
4 There Is a Plurality of Understandings and Realizations of the Concept of "Human Dignity"
36(16)
Human Dignity and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
36(3)
Human Dignity as a Realization of Justice
39(2)
Philosophical Schools' Understanding of Dignity and Human Rights
41(4)
Human Dignity and Bioethics, Gender Inequalities and Social Choices
45(7)
5 Dignity, Human Rights and Language Philosophy
52(13)
Human Rights Claims as Sentences of Individual Speakers
52(4)
Human Rights Claims and International Law: Claiming Dignity for Those Who Cannot Claim It for Themselves
56(9)
6 The West's Adherence to Privileges, Cultural Contexts and Arguments on State Sovereignty Challenge Universal Human Rights
65(22)
A Case from Asia: Advancing Human Rights with Respect for the Local Culture
66(4)
A Case for Reform of the United Nations
70(2)
Case Studies from Nigeria, Senegal and Colombia
72(6)
Communist China's Resistance to Human Rights and the Case for a Human Rights Crisis
78(4)
Human Rights Enforcement: Who Accepts the International Criminal Court?
82(5)
7 Democracy Is about Self-Determination of Women, Men and Queer within Their Communities
87(11)
Africa's Struggle for Self-Determination and Cultural Integrity
87(4)
Europe's Way to Democracy: Philosophical Enlightenment, Revolution, Wars and Violence
91(7)
8 Choice and Ability to Claim One's Dignity as Policies of the Individual
98(14)
Men, Women and Queer Change the Polity of Their Communities
103(2)
The Nature of Human Rights
105(7)
9 A Question to Be Answered by Empirical Social Research: Are Women and Men Conscious of Their Dignity in Relation to the Quality of Their Social Choices and Social Realizations?
112(51)
From Philosophical Investigation to Empirical Social Research
113(4)
Social Realizations: From the Global to the Regional to the Local
117(4)
Measuring the Quality of Social Choices and Social Realizations: The Case of Bogota
121(7)
Rereading the Interviews: Understanding the Control Quality of Social Realizations as an Indicator for Dignity
128(35)
10 Language Philosophy, Interview Sentences, Dignity and Human Rights
163(12)
Sentences of Ordinary People
164(2)
Criteria for Sense and Nonsense of Sentences
166(4)
Sentences Speaking of Social Choices and Showing Dignity
170(5)
11 Conclusion
175(3)
Index 178
Stephan P. Leher is Professor of Moral Theology at the University of Innsbruck, Austria.