Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Analytical Table of Contents
- Preface
- Dedication
- Introduction
- 1 Human Rights and Community: Unlocking the Deadlock
- 2 Are Human Rights Enough?
- 3 Good Governance as Metaphor for Development
- 4 Good Governance and the Marketisation of Human Rights
- 5 The Good Governance of Electricity: Nigeria as Case Study
- 6 Reclaiming Human Rights: A Theory of Community
- 7 Electricity for Community by Community: The Co-operative Model
- Conclusion: Imagining a Post-state Human Rights Discourse
- Bibliography
- Index
4 - Good Governance and the Marketisation of Human Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Analytical Table of Contents
- Preface
- Dedication
- Introduction
- 1 Human Rights and Community: Unlocking the Deadlock
- 2 Are Human Rights Enough?
- 3 Good Governance as Metaphor for Development
- 4 Good Governance and the Marketisation of Human Rights
- 5 The Good Governance of Electricity: Nigeria as Case Study
- 6 Reclaiming Human Rights: A Theory of Community
- 7 Electricity for Community by Community: The Co-operative Model
- Conclusion: Imagining a Post-state Human Rights Discourse
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The IFIs [international financial institutions] have embraced human rights … because they are now an official end of development; because they contribute directly to good economic outcomes; because they protect the interest of civil society groups and serve as a counterweight to the power of the state; and because they form part of the political climate necessary to attract investment and ensure growth.
INTRODUCTION
Human rights have, for at least two reasons, become a pervasive aspect of good governance. First, the normative language of human rights can arguably be seen as an instrument that nurtures, shapes, determines or validates good governance, and ultimately, the practice of development. Secondly, and the focus of attention in this chapter, is that the various initiatives and practices of good governance have themselves sustained the plurality of meanings and values of human rights. Good governance is now an important basis for the enjoyment of human rights, and it places the free-market economy (deregulation, devaluation and privatisation) as a key source of normativity for human rights. The purpose of this chapter, as such, is to consider and explain how the market-based human rights approach works, including providing reasons for its emergence, its philosophical underpinnings, its limitations, and the role of the Bretton Wood Institutions (BWIs) in the processes of its diffusion. In doing so, the chapter outlines and defends the general critique of the role of markets in human rights discourse.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Human Rights from CommunityA Rights-Based Approach to Development, pp. 95 - 122Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2013