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Defensive Relativism - The Use of Cultural Relativism in International Legal Practice (Hardcover)
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Defensive Relativism - The Use of Cultural Relativism in International Legal Practice (Hardcover)
Series: Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights
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Defensive Relativism describes how governments around the world use
cultural relativism in legal argument to oppose international human
rights law. Defensive relativist arguments appear in international
courts, at the committees established by human rights treaties, and
at the United Nations Human Rights Council. The aim of defensive
relativist arguments is to exempt a state from having to apply
international human rights law, or to stop international human
rights law evolving, because it would interfere with cultural
traditions the state deems important. It is an everyday occurrence
in international human rights law and defensive relativist
arguments can be used by various types of states. The end goal of
defensive relativism is to allow a state to appear human rights
compliant while at the same time not implementing international
human rights law. Drawing on a range of materials, such as state
reports on the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and cases from the European
Court of Human Rights involving freedom of religion, this book
provides a definitive survey of defensive relativism. Crucially,
Frederick Cowell argues, defensive relativism is not about
alternative practices of human rights law, or debates about the
origins or legitimacy of human rights as a concept. Defensive
relativism is instead a variety of tactical argument used by states
to justify ignoring international human rights law. Yet, as Cowell
concludes, defensive relativism can’t be removed from the law, as
it is a reflection of unresolved tensions about the nature of what
it means for rights to be universal.
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