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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter July 16, 2001

The Force, Frailty, and Future of Human Rights under Globalization

  • Ulrich K. Preuss

The author makes the claim that human rights have become an important institution of international relations, their inherent powerlessness notwithstanding. In the first step of the analysis, the author discusses the positive correlation between a nationâs socioeconomic well-being and the safe guarantee of human rights. However, the social and political disembeddedness of human rights and their universalist character actually constitute their inherent weakness, which is analyzed in the second part. In the third part, which deals with the future development of human rights, the author makes the claim that the process of globalization does not only create the functional networks of economic, political, and military power elites, but also offers hope for the emergence of a global moral community in which the idea of human rights may become an essential institutional pillar.

Published Online: 2001-7-16

©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston

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