Self, Ethics & Human Rights

Self, Ethics & Human Rights

EnglishPaperback / softbackPrint on demand
Indaimo Joseph
Taylor & Francis Ltd
EAN: 9781138211315
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This book explores how the notion of human identity informs the ethical goal of justice in human rights. Within the modern discourse of human rights, the issue of identity has been largely neglected. However, within this discourse lies a conceptualisation of identity that was derived from a particular liberal philosophy about the ‘true nature’ of the isolated, self-determining and rational individual. Rights are thus conceived as something that are owned by each independent self, and that guarantee the exercise of its autonomy. Critically engaging this subject of rights, this book considers how recent shifts in the concept of identity and, more specifically, the critical humanist notion of ‘the other’, provides a basis for re-imagining the foundation of contemporary human rights. Drawing on the work of Jacques Lacan and Emmanuel Levinas, an inter-subjectivity between self and other ‘always already’ marks human identity with an ethical openness. And, this book argues, it is in the shift away from the human self as a ‘sovereign individual’ that human rights have come to reflect a self-identity that is grounded in the potential of an irreducible concern for the other.

EAN 9781138211315
ISBN 1138211311
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication date July 11, 2016
Pages 288
Language English
Dimensions 234 x 156
Country United Kingdom
Authors Indaimo Joseph