
Contents
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I. Human Rights are Globalizing … I. Human Rights are Globalizing …
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II. … Through States II. … Through States
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III. Two Sovereignties III. Two Sovereignties
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IV. The Citizen/Human Paradox IV. The Citizen/Human Paradox
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V. Human Rights are Political V. Human Rights are Political
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Bibliography Bibliography
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8 Political Limits of International Human Rights: A Response (or a Rejoinder) to Christian Reus-Smit
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3 Human Rights, Global Justice, and the Limits of Law
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Published:November 2019
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Abstract
Although international human rights law is globalizing, it has inherent limits due to the fundamental paradox through which it is being institutionalized: humans have rights as such, but citizens must give themselves the law. Moreover, sociologically, respect for human rights in practice depends on how states are structured and on the political projects of officials who act ‘in the name of the state’. It depends on material and moral resources—economic, military, legitimacy, and authority—organized across nominal divisions between state and civil society and across state borders. From a sociological perspective, the author argues that human rights are necessarily political, and that the entanglement of the ‘international’ and the ‘national’, ‘human’ and ‘citizen’, is unavoidable for the progressive construction of human rights.
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