Paradigms of International Human Rights Law
Paradigms of International Human Rights Law
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Author(s): Fellmeth, Aaron X.
Fellmeth, Aaron Xavier
ISBN No.: 9780190611279
Pages: 312
Year: 201608
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 225.02
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS & CITATIONS INTRODUCTION PART I - HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL DUTIES Chapter 1 - The Concept of Fundamental Duties A. The Universal Duties Movement 1. Individual Duties 2. Corporate Duties B. Five Classes of Beneficiaries of Moral Duties: A Typology 1. Duties Toward Other Individuals 2. Duties Toward Discrete Groups 3. Duties Toward Humankind as a Whole 4.


Duties Toward Oneself 5. Ecological Duties C. Conclusion Chapter 2 - Duties and Rights as Alternative Value Paradigms A. Universal Human Duties as a Legal Concept 1. Why Individual Duties? 2. Objections to Individual Duties under IHRL 3. Summary B. Corporate Human Rights Duties as a Legal Concept C.


State Fundamental Duties as an Alternative to Individual Human Rights 1. Tonal Connotations of Rights and Duties Paradigms 2. Identification of the Relevant Duty Holder and Extent of Its Duties 3. Ascertainment of Interests of the Right Holder and Right Claiming PART II -NONDISCRIMINATION AND SUBSTANTIVE RIGHT CLAIMING PARADIGMS Chapter 3 - Nondiscrimination as a Claiming Paradigm A. Two Methods of Value Protection B. The International Legal Definition of Discrimination 1. Similar Situations 2. Legitimate Aim 3.


Proportionality C. Contextual Factors in Discrimination Analysis 1. Prohibited Grounds 2. The Protected Interest 3. The Individual and Social Consequences of Discrimination 4. Source of the Threat 5. Intention to Discriminate D. Rationalizing Nondiscrimination Doctrine 1.


Prohibited Grounds 2. Interests Protected 3. Public and Private Discriminators 4. Intention to Discriminate Chapter 4 - Interchangeability and Complementarity of Substantive and Nondiscrimination Paradigms A. The Extent and Limits of Equivalence 1. General Substitutability 2. Limits on Substitutability 3. The Ius Cogens Question 4.


Group Rights and Discrimination B. Legal Implications and Systemic Consequences of the Choice of Paradigms 1. The Substantive Rights Claiming Paradigm 2. The Discrimination Claiming Paradigm C. Complementarity of Nondiscrimination and Substantive Rights Claims PART III - NEGATIVE AND POSITIVE HUMAN RIGHTS Chapter 5 - Are Negative and Positive Distinct and Meaningful Categories? A. The Conventional Distinction Between Negative and Positive Rights 1. Common Definitions 2. The Basis for the Negative and Positive Distinction B.


What Makes a Right Negative? C. Can There Even Be Negative Rights? D. The Concept of "Basic" Positive Rights Chapter 6 - The Legal Consequences of Negative and Positive Paradigms A. The Scope of Negative and Positive Rights 1. Negative and Positive as Non-Opposites 2. Nonuniformity in the Strength and Scope of Rights within Categories 3. Pseudo-Positive Rights B. Complementary Framing C.


Ambiguously Framed Rights Chapter 7 - Structural Implications of Negative and Positive Paradigms A. Positive Rights and Economic Development B. Is There a Negative Duty to Renounce Benefits from Injustice? C. Are Positive Rights Generally Desirable? 1. Ethics and Positive Rights 2. Positive Rights as a Practical Concept Epilogue Index.


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