University of Wollongong
Browse

Law, cosmopolitan law, and the protection of human rights

Download (177.07 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 06:45 authored by Sarah Sorial
In Between Facts and Norms, Habermas articulates a system of rights, including human rights, within the democratic constitutional state. For Habermas, while human rights, like other subjective rights have moral content, they do not structurally belong to a moral system; nor should they be grounded in one. Instead, human rights belong to a positive and coercive legal order upon which individuals can make actionable legal claims. Habermas extends this argument to include international human rights, which are realised within the context of a cosmopolitan legal order. The aim of this paper is to assess the relevance of law as a mechanism for securing human rights protection. I argue that positive law does make a material difference to securing individual human rights and to cultivating and augmenting a general rights culture both nationally and globally. I suggest that Habermas’ model of law presents the most viable way of negotiating the tensions that human rights discourse gives rise to: the tensions between morality and law, between legality and politics, and between the national and international contexts of human rights protection.

Funding

Can saying something make it so? Sedition, speech act theory and the status of freedom of speech in Australia

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Citation

S. Sorial, 'Law, cosmopolitan law, and the protection of human rights' (2008) 4 (2) Journal of International Political Theory 241-265.

Journal title

Journal of International Political Theory

Volume

4

Issue

2

Pagination

241-265

Language

English

RIS ID

25293

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC