Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space
This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is based on the foundational question: are state sovereignty and human rights reconcilable within the framework of international society? This question is then divided into three discrete questions, a...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-118902018-01-05T17:36:07Z Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space Lui, Andrew This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is based on the foundational question: are state sovereignty and human rights reconcilable within the framework of international society? This question is then divided into three discrete questions, along the topics of normative theory, international organization and norm change, which are dealt with in three respective chapters. Chapter One problematizes the moral purpose of the sovereign state, how it has changed and continues to change over time, and how global norms of human rights have introduced constraints on state sovereignty, both de jure and de facto. Global norms of human rights are essentially gaining power because the protection of the fundamental unit of political agency—the individual human being—is the present most effective means to ensure the fundamental values of political equality and diversity in the international realm. Chapter Two follows by explaining how changes in the moral purpose of the state translate into changes in international organization. This chapter reveals that both centralized and decentralized authorities structure international society. The case of international law and the International Criminal Court (ICC) is used to provide empirical evidence of structures of international vertical and horizontal legitimacy that fall into the latter typology and thereby structure international political behaviour. Chapter Three surveys the question of human rights entrepreneurship. It builds upon the successes and shortcomings of existing constructivist discourse to show how human rights entrepreneurs can induce norm change through the pedagogical techniques of norm life cycles. This thesis attempts to offer a more accurate conceptual account of change in international relations. Arts, Faculty of Political Science, Department of Graduate 2009-08-06T18:16:04Z 2009-08-06T18:16:04Z 2001 2001-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11890 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 6092003 bytes application/pdf |
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This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human
rights. Research is based on the foundational question: are state sovereignty and human
rights reconcilable within the framework of international society? This question is then
divided into three discrete questions, along the topics of normative theory, international
organization and norm change, which are dealt with in three respective chapters. Chapter
One problematizes the moral purpose of the sovereign state, how it has changed and
continues to change over time, and how global norms of human rights have introduced
constraints on state sovereignty, both de jure and de facto. Global norms of human rights are
essentially gaining power because the protection of the fundamental unit of political
agency—the individual human being—is the present most effective means to ensure the
fundamental values of political equality and diversity in the international realm. Chapter
Two follows by explaining how changes in the moral purpose of the state translate into
changes in international organization. This chapter reveals that both centralized and
decentralized authorities structure international society. The case of international law and the
International Criminal Court (ICC) is used to provide empirical evidence of structures of
international vertical and horizontal legitimacy that fall into the latter typology and thereby
structure international political behaviour. Chapter Three surveys the question of human
rights entrepreneurship. It builds upon the successes and shortcomings of existing
constructivist discourse to show how human rights entrepreneurs can induce norm change
through the pedagogical techniques of norm life cycles. This thesis attempts to offer a more
accurate conceptual account of change in international relations. === Arts, Faculty of === Political Science, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Lui, Andrew |
spellingShingle |
Lui, Andrew Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
author_facet |
Lui, Andrew |
author_sort |
Lui, Andrew |
title |
Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
title_short |
Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
title_full |
Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
title_fullStr |
Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
title_full_unstemmed |
Human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
title_sort |
human rights in a world of states : global norms and the evolution of political space |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/11890 |
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AT luiandrew humanrightsinaworldofstatesglobalnormsandtheevolutionofpoliticalspace |
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