Human values and moral exclusion

This article uses empirical data from the anthropology of human rights and the ethics of everyday life to examine the relationship between dominant value frames, moral action, and the rise of ‘counter-humanities’ in the form of cultural identitarianism, racial and class-based nationalism, apocalypti...

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Main Author: Mark Goodale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Ethics & Global Politics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ethicsandglobalpolitics.net/index.php/egp/article/view/32957/50471
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spelling doaj-4ad8221dbd9b40429fd7386851f549f42020-11-25T01:44:10ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEthics & Global Politics1654-63692016-12-019011310.3402/egp.v9.3295732957Human values and moral exclusionMark Goodale0Cultural and Social Anthropology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, SwitzerlandThis article uses empirical data from the anthropology of human rights and the ethics of everyday life to examine the relationship between dominant value frames, moral action, and the rise of ‘counter-humanities’ in the form of cultural identitarianism, racial and class-based nationalism, apocalyptic theologies, and nativist populism. This article focuses, in particular, on the emergence and growing power of the value frame of human rights in the post-Cold War period and argues that the more recent spread of violent movements based in forms of moral exclusion was an ironic consequence of the power of human rights. After considering, and then rejecting, the possibility that citizenship can stand in for ‘humanity’ as a more sustainable value frame, the article concludes with an argument for the promise of a post-utopian solidarity inspired by the humanism of Montaigne and More and the pluralism of Berlin.http://www.ethicsandglobalpolitics.net/index.php/egp/article/view/32957/50471human rightsnationalismcitizenshipanthropologyhumanityethical theorymoral practicesolidaritypost-utopian
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Goodale
spellingShingle Mark Goodale
Human values and moral exclusion
Ethics & Global Politics
human rights
nationalism
citizenship
anthropology
humanity
ethical theory
moral practice
solidarity
post-utopian
author_facet Mark Goodale
author_sort Mark Goodale
title Human values and moral exclusion
title_short Human values and moral exclusion
title_full Human values and moral exclusion
title_fullStr Human values and moral exclusion
title_full_unstemmed Human values and moral exclusion
title_sort human values and moral exclusion
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Ethics & Global Politics
issn 1654-6369
publishDate 2016-12-01
description This article uses empirical data from the anthropology of human rights and the ethics of everyday life to examine the relationship between dominant value frames, moral action, and the rise of ‘counter-humanities’ in the form of cultural identitarianism, racial and class-based nationalism, apocalyptic theologies, and nativist populism. This article focuses, in particular, on the emergence and growing power of the value frame of human rights in the post-Cold War period and argues that the more recent spread of violent movements based in forms of moral exclusion was an ironic consequence of the power of human rights. After considering, and then rejecting, the possibility that citizenship can stand in for ‘humanity’ as a more sustainable value frame, the article concludes with an argument for the promise of a post-utopian solidarity inspired by the humanism of Montaigne and More and the pluralism of Berlin.
topic human rights
nationalism
citizenship
anthropology
humanity
ethical theory
moral practice
solidarity
post-utopian
url http://www.ethicsandglobalpolitics.net/index.php/egp/article/view/32957/50471
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