Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Reflections on Dialogues between Practitioners and Theorists of Human Rights
- SECTION I NORTHERN INGOs AND SOUTHERN AID RECIPIENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF UNEQUAL POWER
- SECTION II INGOs AND GOVERNMENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH STATES THAT RESTRICT THE ACTIVITIES OF INGOs
- SECTION III INGOs AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH GLOBAL POVERTY
- 9 Defending Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Practical Issues Faced by an International Human Rights Organization
- 10 Thinking through Social and Economic Rights
- Response to the Critique of Neera Chandhoke
- A Final Response to Kenneth Roth
- 11 Amnesty International and Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
- 12 Moral Priorities for International Human Rights NGOs
- 13 The Problem of Doing Good in a World That Isn't: Reflections on the Ethical Challenges Facing INGOs
- Respect and Disagreement: A Response to Joseph Carens
- Conclusion: INGOs as Collective Mobilization of Transnational Solidarity: Implications for Human Rights Work at the United Nations
- Index
10 - Thinking through Social and Economic Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Reflections on Dialogues between Practitioners and Theorists of Human Rights
- SECTION I NORTHERN INGOs AND SOUTHERN AID RECIPIENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF UNEQUAL POWER
- SECTION II INGOs AND GOVERNMENTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH STATES THAT RESTRICT THE ACTIVITIES OF INGOs
- SECTION III INGOs AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS: THE CHALLENGE OF DEALING WITH GLOBAL POVERTY
- 9 Defending Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Practical Issues Faced by an International Human Rights Organization
- 10 Thinking through Social and Economic Rights
- Response to the Critique of Neera Chandhoke
- A Final Response to Kenneth Roth
- 11 Amnesty International and Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
- 12 Moral Priorities for International Human Rights NGOs
- 13 The Problem of Doing Good in a World That Isn't: Reflections on the Ethical Challenges Facing INGOs
- Respect and Disagreement: A Response to Joseph Carens
- Conclusion: INGOs as Collective Mobilization of Transnational Solidarity: Implications for Human Rights Work at the United Nations
- Index
Summary
The central questions that this chapter addresses are as follows: what is the conceptual status that human rights activism allots to social and economic rights, and what is the status that activism should allot to these rights, and why? These questions are significant because traditionally liberal democratic theory, which arguably inspires and sustains the activities of human rights INGOs, has been preoccupied with two sets of concerns: how to best safeguard human life and liberty. These concerns have been, throughout history, protected through codification of the right to life, the right to physical integrity, and the right to freedom. Correspondingly, because the best way of shielding these rights is to ensure the right to voice, or ensure the right to political participation and freedom of expression, political rights have emerged as concomitants of civil rights. Social and economic rights such as the right to livelihood, health, nutrition, and education, or the right not to eke out a living in conditions that prove highly detrimental to human dignity, have been, at least until recently, treated by liberal democratic theory and human rights INGOs much as poor cousins are treated in extended families – as hangers on at worst and as inconvenient necessities at best.
There was of course a time when the socialist tradition asserted the primacy of social and economic rights. That time passed when in the late 1980s communist states collapsed at the very moment civil societies in Eastern and Central Europe mobilized to demand civil and political rights.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ethics in ActionThe Ethical Challenges of International Human Rights Nongovernmental Organizations, pp. 181 - 197Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006