Book Chapter
Restoring the ‘human’ in ‘human rights’: Personhood and doctrinal innovation in the UN disability convention
G Quinn, A Arstein-Kerslake
Cambridge Companion to Human Rights Law | Published : 2010
Abstract
‘What is needed nowadays is that as against an abstract and unreal theory of State omnipotence on the one hand, and an atomistic and artificial view of individual independence on the other, the facts of the world with its innumerable bonds of association and the naturalness of social authority should be generally recognized, and become the basis of our laws, as it is of our life.’ Recovering the human ‘Human rights’ – here are two words expressing two different normative domains. Most simply assume that the two are mutually reinforcing, mutually implicated by each other, coterminous and coeval. Everywhere in the world, first-year law students are routinely told that we enjoy human rights sim..
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