Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age

Rights define the prevailing relations that constitute a community. They are in turn defined by the character of a given mode of production, and as that changes so too the system of rights. The rights that comprise ‘human rights’ evolved in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and represent t...

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Main Author: Gary Teeple
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2007-06-01
Series:Studies in Social Justice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/index.php/SSJ/article/view/975
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spelling doaj-3876a3735b144713b7369d67bf77b4012020-11-24T20:51:30ZengBrock UniversityStudies in Social Justice1911-47882007-06-0112136145958Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past AgeGary Teeple0Simon Fraser UniversityRights define the prevailing relations that constitute a community. They are in turn defined by the character of a given mode of production, and as that changes so too the system of rights. The rights that comprise ‘human rights’ evolved in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and represent the principles of the emerging world order in the 18th and 19th centuries. Only in the aftermath of World War II with the exhaustion or defeat of the European states and Japan was it possible to declare these same principles as belonging to the whole world equally and as intrinsic to all humans - yet within national frameworks. The accumulation of capital on a global scale, however, soon began to undermine the national practice of these human rights. By the end of the 1980s the construction of regional or global ‘enabling frameworks,’ quasi-states for capital, detached from any formal or legitimate means of countervailing political leverage, made human rights appear increasingly like anachronisms. An increasingly violent usurpation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other forms of rights around the world followed. In the absence of a legitimizing set of principles for this new global economy, a growing need for a rationale to govern by fiat becomes the central problem of the day.http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/index.php/SSJ/article/view/975human rightsneoliberalismgovernance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gary Teeple
spellingShingle Gary Teeple
Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
Studies in Social Justice
human rights
neoliberalism
governance
author_facet Gary Teeple
author_sort Gary Teeple
title Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
title_short Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
title_full Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
title_fullStr Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
title_full_unstemmed Honoured in the Breach: Human Rights as Principles of a Past Age
title_sort honoured in the breach: human rights as principles of a past age
publisher Brock University
series Studies in Social Justice
issn 1911-4788
publishDate 2007-06-01
description Rights define the prevailing relations that constitute a community. They are in turn defined by the character of a given mode of production, and as that changes so too the system of rights. The rights that comprise ‘human rights’ evolved in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and represent the principles of the emerging world order in the 18th and 19th centuries. Only in the aftermath of World War II with the exhaustion or defeat of the European states and Japan was it possible to declare these same principles as belonging to the whole world equally and as intrinsic to all humans - yet within national frameworks. The accumulation of capital on a global scale, however, soon began to undermine the national practice of these human rights. By the end of the 1980s the construction of regional or global ‘enabling frameworks,’ quasi-states for capital, detached from any formal or legitimate means of countervailing political leverage, made human rights appear increasingly like anachronisms. An increasingly violent usurpation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other forms of rights around the world followed. In the absence of a legitimizing set of principles for this new global economy, a growing need for a rationale to govern by fiat becomes the central problem of the day.
topic human rights
neoliberalism
governance
url http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/index.php/SSJ/article/view/975
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