
Contents
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I. How To Do Things with Rights—Three Examples I. How To Do Things with Rights—Three Examples
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A. Rights in a Counter-Reformation mode: Spanish sixteenth century A. Rights in a Counter-Reformation mode: Spanish sixteenth century
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B. Rights, Protestantism, and trade: Dutch seventeenth century B. Rights, Protestantism, and trade: Dutch seventeenth century
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C. Rights, Empire, and revolution: eighteenth century C. Rights, Empire, and revolution: eighteenth century
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II. The Power and Weakness of Rights: Some Conclusions II. The Power and Weakness of Rights: Some Conclusions
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References References
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Cite
Abstract
Rights are an inextricable part of contemporary domestic and international legal speech. They appear in political manifestoes and professional vocabularies and they are used to defend agendas of reform and retrenchment alike. The idiom of (subjective) rights has a long pedigree in Western legal and political thought. But its content and significance have varied by reference to the needs of the moment. Recently, efforts have been made to contextualize the use of rights as part of Western politics and law. This suggests viewing the expansion of rights-talk as inextricable from the globalization of Western political ideas and the universalization of typical Western preferences. This chapter examines some of those uses. The idea is not to find the “origin” of rights (for there is no such single origin) but to enquire into the meaning, power, and limits of a ubiquitous form of politico-legal speech.
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