Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/123678
Title: The justification of human rights and the question of its cross-cultural validity : universal theories and particular perspectives
Authors: Stamoulas, Aristotelis
Keywords: Human rights -- International cooperation
Human rights -- Philosophy
Cultural relativism
Human rights -- Cross-cultural studies
Issue Date: 2004
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Laws
Citation: Stamoulas, A. (2004). The justification of human rights and the question of its cross-cultural validity : universal theories and particular perspectives. Mediterranean Journal of Human Rights, 8(1), 297-320.
Abstract: Efforts to justify Human Rights through an all-encompassing theory of cross-cultural validity have engrossed Western theorists. An exaggerated belief that all people think in a similar fashion and, thus, will affirm human rights as a project commonly agreed between liberal and non-liberal societies, has resulted in the absence of cultural differentiation. On one hand the East is called to surrender itself to a form of Western moral infiltration, and, on the other hand, the East raises arguments of state sovereignty and non-interference. A West-East confrontation on the ideological level of justification is sterile, for it perpetuates unnecessary philosophical tensions and unresolved problems related to Human Rights implementation. Instead of being trapped in a vain search for a liberal philosophical justification inspired by the West, it would be more desirable to pursue a cultural emancipation by locating the humanistic core of human rights in each and every society.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/123678
Appears in Collections:Mediterranean Journal of Human Rights, volume 8, number 1



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