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Human Rights And The Search For Community (Paperback)
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Human Rights And The Search For Community (Paperback)
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Some critics contend that the concept of universal human rights
reflects the West's anticommunitarian, self-centered individualism,
which disproportionately focuses on individual autonomy. In this
book Rhoda Howard-Hassmann refutes this claim, arguing instead that
communities can exist in modern Western societies if they protect
the whole spectrum of individual human rights, not only civil and
political but also economic rights.Howard-Hassmann supports the
case for the universality of human rights by showing community to
be inherent in and essential to the realization of universal human
rights. She makes an original contribution to the study of
universal human rights through her review of those types of
communitarian thought that underlie cultural relativist attacks on
human rights. Howard-Hassmann defends individual rights against
conservative and leftist communitarian challenges emanating from
both the Western world and the Third World. Exploring conservative
viewpoints, she examines traditionalists of the Third
World--focusing on African and Muslim traditionalist schools, as
well as reactionary conservatives of the Western world.
Howard-Hassmann then looks at challenges from the left, including
collectivists, who see universal human rights as the products of
cultural imperialism or capitalist exploitation, and status
radicals, such as feminists or black activists, who are critics of
liberalism.Howard-Hassmann also criticizes what she dubs "radical
capitalism" or "social minimalism," the idea that there is a very
narrow range of true human rights, including the right to property,
and that citizens are responsible for no one but themselves. A
community, in Howard-Hassmann's view, is a group of people who all
feel a sense of obligation to all others in the group. For a
community to work in the modern world, everyone must be treated
equally, enjoy societal respect, and be able to act autonomously in
her or his everyday decisionmaking.
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