Where do our rights come from? Does "natural law" really exist outside of what is written in constitutions and legal statutes? If so, why are rights not the same everywhere and in all eras? On the other hand, if rights are nothing more than the product of human law, why should we ever allow them to override the popular will? In Rights from Wrongs, renowned legal scholar Alan Dershowitz puts forward a wholly new and compelling answer to this age-old dilemma: Rights, he argues, do not come from God, nature, logic, or law alone. They arise out of particular human experiences with injustice. Rights from Wrongs is the first book to propose a theory of rights that emerges not from a theory of perfect justice but from its opposite: from the bottom up, from trial and error, and from our collective experience of injustice. Human rights come from human wrongs. "[Dershowitz's] underlying theory is one that can be neutrally applied by people residing at all positions within the political spectrum.... Perhaps if his views were understood by more people, there would be both a toning down of the political rhetoric." -Tampa Tribune
Carr offers no theory of fiction to explain how it is that the ascription of duties and rights to fictional entities can play the role outside of fiction, in law and ordinary thought, that his account requires.
Together, the eight principal essays in Rights, Wrongs, and Responsibilities shed philosophical light on public law, criminal law, and most areas of private law as they explore the bearings of the three key concepts in the volume's title.
Roger Scruton. numerical and qualitative identity A is numerically identical with B if A and B are not two things but one . If A and B are two things , but indistinguishable in their qualities , then they are not numerically but ...
Na een analyse van de rechten van kinderen wordt ingegaan op specifieke thema's zoals kindermishandeling, criminaliteit, opvoeding, de zorg voor kinderen.
Children initially indicated that they did not want to be stopped from working, but took up slogans for the abolition of child labor when they realized this was required for selection as a delegate (S. Levine, 1999, 151–152).
In the brief compass of a note I am obliged to refer the reader to my reading of Woolf in ' Deconstruction and Cultural Studies : Arguments for A Deconstructive Cultural Studies ' , in Nicholas Royle ( ed . ) ...
Do animals have rights? If not, do we have duties towards them? If so, what duties? These are myariad other issues are discussed in this brilliantly argued book, published in association with the leading think-tank Demos.
Cultural Rights and Wrongs: A Collection of Essays in Commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human...
Rebecca Johnson, “Leaving Normal: Constructing the Family at the Movies and in Law” in Lori G. Beaman, ed., New Perspectives on Deviance: The Construction of Deviance in Everyday Life (Scarborough, ON: Prentice-Hall, ...
Brings the themes of much contemporary work in political philosophy to bear on concrete questions of social policy.