A realistic utopia? Critical analyses of The Human Rights State in theory and deployment: Guest editors’ introduction

Wolfsteller, R. and Gregg, B. (2017) A realistic utopia? Critical analyses of The Human Rights State in theory and deployment: Guest editors’ introduction. International Journal of Human Rights, 21(3), pp. 219-229. (doi: 10.1080/13642987.2017.1298729)

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Abstract

We introduce this special issue on Benjamin Gregg’s recent theory of a human rights state by contextualising it within current human rights scholarship and explicating its core claims, before we provide an overview of the eight contributions. We argue that the concept of a human rights state addresses two interrelated problems within human rights research by bridging the significant disconnect in the literature between human rights theory and practice. First, it conceives human rights as socially constructed norms whose reach and validity are historically contingent, depending on their free embrace and effective implementation by their local addressees. In this way it dispenses with the ever fruitless, even counterproductive attempts to advance human rights by claims about their putative, ultimate normative foundation. Second, it overcomes the limitations and failures of the top-down, generally unenforceable international human rights regime with a bottom-up alternative: the human rights state as a metaphorical polity in which activists promote human rights-friendly change within the corresponding nation state. In each case of such a metaphorical polity, a network of self-selected activists within the nation state promotes the free embrace of self-authored human rights through incorporating those rights in the nation state’s legal and political system. Subsequently, aspirations to an international human rights law would finally be redeemed as effective norms through the overlapping agreement among more and more political communities that have freely embraced their self-authored human rights and institutionalised them at local levels.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:WOLFSTELLER, Rene
Authors: Wolfsteller, R., and Gregg, B.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > School of Social and Political Sciences > Politics
Journal Name:International Journal of Human Rights
Publisher:Taylor & Francis
ISSN:1364-2987
ISSN (Online):1744-053X
Published Online:30 March 2017
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
First Published:First published in International Journal of Human Rights 21(3):219-229
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher

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