Publication details

Democracy and Human Rights: The Contemporaneous Globality of Human Rights

Authors

DOKULIL Miloš

Year of publication 2003
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source The Bi-Monthly Journal of the BWW Society
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Informatics

Citation
Field Political sciences
Keywords human/civic rights; natural/moral rights; 5 levels of interaction; social contract; rights and duties; categories of "human rights"; 4 phases of welfare; cultural tradition; the first six years of human life; globalization; insufficiently articulated responsibility
Description The notion of human rights seems either too awkward to be discussed, or -- where such rights are not observed --too remote to be useful. There is a strange necessity to continually redefine the sequence of the priorities taken as "human/civic rights" and their value. Owing to the actual, rather problematic economic, cultural and informational globalization the complex of human rights can become a sensitive point of worldwide integration. If anything is a "right", it should not be very ennobling to have to strive for it. The contribution enumerates some major "human rights" and several hindrances preventing their realization. In the West four historical phases of welfare have prevented the worst social clashes. The Achilles' heel in evaluating "human rights" can surely be found in the insufficiently articulated responsibility for their both local and global fulfillment.

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