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DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS

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Title: DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS


1
DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
2
  • HUMAN DIGNITY
  • How should human rights be conceived?
  • POLITICAL AUTONOMY AND SOVEREIGNTY
  • What is the tension between human rights and
    democracy?
  • GLOBAL JUSTICE
  • Which kind of world order do we need?

3
1. HUMAN DIGNITY
4
UNIVERSALLY VALID CLAIMS
  • Human rights gt claims of individuals asserted to
    states, confederations, transnational
    institutions and companies who are based on human
    dignity.
  • All human beings are entitled to make these
    claims.
  • These claims are universally valid, i.e.
    independent of cultural differences and
    historical developments.
  • These are claims of individuals and not claims of
    groups.
  • Human rights require a specific global order.

5
ASPECTS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN HUMAN HISTORY
  • The universalization of human rights.
  • In the nation state connected with citizenship.
  • Human rights have become more and more an aspect
    of international right, the law of peoples and
    NGOs.
  • The transformation of human rights into human
    rights.
  • The tension between legality and morality as a
    trigger for the development of the political
    struggle about human rights.

6
BEYOND THE LEX NATURAE
  • Human rights as moral claims that should be
    transformed into legal rights.
  • Lex naturae (natural right) gt all human beings
    are by nature equal.
  • The idea of natural right became an important
    element of contract theories (Hobbes and Locke).
  • This idea is criticized because of its
    essentialism.

7
HUMAN DIGNITY
  • The Preamble of the Universal Declaration of
    Human Rights starts with the idea that the
    recognition of the inherent dignity of all
    members of the human family is the foundation of
    freedom, justice and peace in the world.
  • Individuals have the moral duty to respect each
    other equally.
  • This implies a struggle for equal freedom.

8
THREE PHASES IN THE CONCEPTUALISATION OF HUMAN
DIGNITY
  • 1. Roman Empire gt (Lat. dignitas) the status of
    politicians and members of the aristocracy who
    had a specific role in public life.
  • 2. Middle Ages gt the status of human beings who
    are all equal in the eyes of God.
  • 3. Modernity gt autonomy is the ground for human
    dignity.

9
FOURS KINDS OF HUMAN RIGHTS
  • Civil rights.
  • Political rights.
  • Economic and social rights.
  • Cultural rights.

10
CULTURAL RIGHTS
  • Rights of individuals to the means of personal
    development and of access to the universal
    culture of science (art. 13, 14 and 16 form the
    international Covenant on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights).
  • Rights of groups to practise and reproduce their
    own distinctive culture (art. 27 from the
    International Covenant on Civil and Political
    Rights).

11
THE IDEAL AND THE REAL
  • The debates about human rights are often related
    to the tension between facts and values, is and
    ought, description and prescription.
  • In order to understand this tension, it is
    fruitful to analyse the relations between law,
    politics and morality.
  • Human rights can be seen as moral norms and
    judicial norms.

12
2. POLITICAL AUTONOMY AND SOVEREIGNTY
13
TWO FORMS OF POLITICS
  • 1. Normal politics gt the use of the
    constitutive political rules.
  • 2. Constitutional politics gt the transformation
    of the constitutive political rules.

14
POST-WESTPHALIAN CHANGES IN SOVEREIGNTY
  • The disaggregation of citizenship rights through
    the extension of cosmopolitan norms gt human
    rights.
  • The sovereignty-based model of international law
    appears to be ceding not to global justice, but
    to a world order dominated by some actors who are
    not accountable for what they decide.
  • Hegemon gt an actor that is able to dominate the
    global political system.

15
THE RELATION BETWEEN TWO CORE VALUES
  • Questions can only a democratic government
    respect the full range of our human rights?
  • Does one not have a right to an effective say in
    decisions that importantly affect one?
  • Article 21 Everyone has the right to take part
    in the government of his country, directly or
    through freely chosen representatives The will
    of the people shall be the bass of the authority
    of government this will shall be expressed in
    periodic and genuine elections which shall be by
    universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by
    secret vote or by equivalent free voting
    procedures.

16
THE TENSTION BETWEEN HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEMOCRACY
  • Democracy is based upon state sovereignty gt
    citizenship rights who are exclusive.
  • Human rights are inclusive.
  • Liberalism the priority of human rights gt
    tyranny of the majority.

17
IMPORTANT ISSUES CONCERNING HUMAN RIGHTS AND
DEMOCRACY
  • Sovereignty and self-determination.
  • Peace.
  • The relation between men and women.

18
SOVEREIGNTY AND SELF-DETERMINATION
  • Sovereignty a state has legitimate authority
    over its members if it has the consent of all
    members.
  • A social contract where all citizens consent to
    the authority of a monarch or assembly makes an
    end to the state of nature, i.e. a world without
    a common source of authoritative power where
    individuals compete against each other.
  • Global justice is impossible, because there is no
    world body that can judge whether a state acts
    rightly or wrongly.
  • Self-determination gt a right to self-government,
    entailing either the creation of a sphere of
    autonomy within an existing policy or secession
    from it.

19
FAILED STATES
  • Failed state a state that has collapsed and
    cannot provide for its citizens basic needs.
  • Demographic pressures in which the population
    outstrips resources like food.
  • Refugees and internally displaced persons who
    have grievances against the government.
  • Vengeance-seeking groups with grievances based on
    the belief that they are unfairly treated.
  • Chronic and sustained flight from the country by
    highly trained and educated citizens.
  • Uneven economic and social development.
  • The rule of law and human rights are applied
    unevenly.

20
PEACE ENFORCEMENT
  • Iraqs 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
  • Superpowers agreed to invoke peace enforcement
    for the first time since the Korean War.
  • UN faces a very serious challenge gt violence and
    human suffering in the developing world.
  • Humanitarian intervention gt intervention by
    states or by an international organisation into
    the domestic politics of another state to protect
    people from human rights abuses or other threats
    to their survival.

21
SECOND-GENERATION PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS
  • No clear line separates foes, which are not just
    states, but rebel groups, warlords, and ethnic
    communities engaged in unconventional warfare.
  • Peacekeepers find it difficult to be impartial
    they may identify aggressors and lay blame.
  • Frequently, parties do not consent to a UN
    presence because they have something to gain from
    conflict or view the UN as their adversary.
  • Missions have broad mandates to solve conflicts
    by rebuilding governing institutions, ensuring
    respect for human rights, and delivering
    humanitarian aid.

22
THE RELATION BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN
  • How to correct the problem of a male-dominated
    world?
  • Violations of the rights of women female genital
    mutilation, polygamy, forced marriages, etc.
  • Susan Moller Okin in Is multiculturalism Bad for
    Women? gt we should only respect group rights
    insofar as they do not violate individual rights.

23
GENDER EMPOWERMENT
  • Indicator of opportunities for women, i.e. the
    female share of parliamentary representation
    proportions of legislators, senior officials,
    managers, professionals and technical employees
    who are women and the ratio of female to male
    earnings.
  • The relative degree of gender equality for the
    people living there.

24
MAPPING GENDER EMPOWERMENT
25
3. GLOBAL JUSTICE
26
DO WE LIVE IN AN INJUST WORLD?
  • The answer seems to be yes.
  • Around 40 percent of mankind lives below the
    World Banks 2 dollar per day poverty line.
  • Each day 30.000 children die of hunger, disease
    and other consequences of poverty.
  • The worlds five hundred wealthiest people have
    the same income as the worlds poorest 416
    million.
  • The answer could be no.
  • A question of responsibility gt who is responsible
    for what?

27
JUSTICE
  • Justice (Gr. dikaiosyne Lat iusticia) gt the
    normative assessment of individual and collective
    actions.
  • Justice as a virtue and a specific political
    order.
  • Forms of justice
  • 1. Distributive justice.
  • 2. Retributive justice.
  • 3. Intergenerational justice.
  • 4. Environmental justice.

28
MORAL JUDGMENT
  • Global justice gt the moral assessment of the
    worldwide impact that the actions of some actors
    and the institutional rules have on the quality
    of life of people.
  • Debates about global justice concern
  • 1. The goals that actors and institutions ought
    to achieve.
  • 2. The actions and rules that would help to
    realize these goals.
  • 3. The responsibilities of actors to realize
    their goals.

29
THE INSTITUTIONALIST APPROACH
  • Thomas Pogge.
  • World Poverty and Human Rights (2002).
  • Our world is not governed by anarchy nor a
    world-state, but a world order that is based on
    rules supported by states and its citizens.

30
TOWARDS A NEW GLOBAL INSTITUTIONAL ORDER
  • The current world order contributes to severe
    poverty.
  • Severe poverty is a human rights violation.
  • Wealthy states have a negative duty to refrain
    from contributing to harm and rectifying the
    damage caused.
  • Moral universalism gt certain moral principles
    should be held equally by all persons.
  • Global justice demands structural changes in the
    global institutional order in order to alleviate
    the continuation of severe power.

31
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RIGHTS
  • The debates about global justice are most often
    related to economic and social rights.
  • Thomas Pogge argues that the fulfilment of human
    rights requires an institutional approach to
    global justice.

32
ARTICLE 25
  • Everyone has the right to a standard of living
    adequate for the health and well-being of himself
    and of his family, including, food, clothing,
    housing and medical care and necessary social
    services, and the right to security in the event
    of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood,
    old age or other lack of livelihood in
    circumstances beyond his control.

33
POVERTY
  • Out of 6.2 billion human beings 799 million are
    mal nourished, more than 880 million lack access
    to basic health services and 1 billion are
    without adequate shelter.
  • Some 50.000 human death per day are due to
    poverty-related causes and therefore avoidable.
  • Poverty does not only refer to economic
    inequality, but also to life expectance, level of
    education, health, etc.
  • There is an increasing gap between the poor and
    the rich in the world.

34
ABSOLUTE POVERTY
35
HUMAN POVERTY
36
ARTICLE 28
  • Everyone is entitled to a social and
    international order in which the rights and
    freedoms set forth in this Declaration can be
    fully realized.

37
SHOULD WE BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN THEORY AND
PRAXIS?
  • No, because human rights are nonsense!
  • Yes, because we have a moral duty to fulfil human
    rights promises!

38
COMMUNICATIVE POWER
  • Beyond the opposition of realists and
    constructivists, i.e. the real and the ideal.
  • Consciousness about the performativity of
    normative discourses.
  • Human rights and democracy as guiding principles.

39
HUMAN RIGHTS AND LIBERTY
  • Liberty is a core value of democracy.
  • Human rights refer to two forms of liberty
  • 1. NEGATIVE LIBERTY gt freedom from.
  • 2. POSITIVE LIBERTY gt freedom to.

40
GLOBAL EMPOWERMENT
  • The emergence of Global Justice Movement.
  • Although close to anti-globalization, it presents
    itself as alter-globalization.
  • Main goals
  • 1. Global justice.
  • 2. Democracy.

41
A NETWORK OF NETWORKS
  • The the emergence of the global civil society is
    the context of the Global Justice Movement.
  • The creation of a network of network is the
    strategy of empowerment.
  • Example ATTAC.
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