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Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Political control & freedoms > Human rights
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Human Rights or Global Capitalism - The Limits of Privatization (Hardcover)
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Human Rights or Global Capitalism - The Limits of Privatization (Hardcover)
Series: Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights
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The fall of communism in the late 1980s and the end of the Cold War
seemed to signal a new international social order built on
pluralist democracy, the rule of law, and universal human rights.
But the window of opportunity for creating this more just, more
equal, and more secure world slammed shut just as quickly as it
opened. Rather than celebrate the triumph of democracy over
autocracy, or political freedom over totalitarian rule, the West
exulted in the victory of capitalism over communism. Neoliberal
policies of deregulation and privatization that minimized the role
of the state were imposed on the transitional societies of Central
and Eastern Europe, as well as economically weak and politically
fragile nations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Twenty-five
years later, the world reaps the fruits of that market-driven state
foundation: inequality; poverty; global economic, food, financial,
social, and ecological crises; transnational organized crime and
terrorism; proliferating weapons; fragile states. Human Rights or
Global Capitalism is not simply concerned with the success or
failure of neoliberal policies per se or judging whether they are
good or bad. Rather, it examines the application of those policies
from a human rights perspective and asks whether states, by
outsourcing to the private sector many services with a direct
impact on human rights-education, health, social security, water,
personal liberty, personal security, equality-abdicate their
responsibilities to uphold human rights and thereby violate
international human rights law. Manfred Nowak explores these
examples and outlines the ways in which neoliberal policies
contravene the obligations of states to protect the human rights of
their people.
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