East Asian challenge for human rights / edited by Joanne R. Bauer, Daniel A. Bell.
Material type:
TextPublication details: [Cambridge] ; [New York] : Cambridge University Press, 1999Description: xiii, 394 pages ; 24 cmISBN: - 0521645360
- 9780521645362
- Human rights -- East Asia
- Human rights -- Southeast Asia
- Political culture -- East Asia
- Political culture -- Southeast Asia
- Economic development -- Political aspects -- East Asia
- Economic development -- Political aspects -- Southeast Asia
- Economic development -- Political aspects
- Human rights
- Political culture
- East Asia
- Southeast Asia
- JC599 .E37 1999
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African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights Library | JC599 .E37 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10198008 |
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| JC599 .D74 2013 Droits de l'homme : une grammaire du développement / | JC599 .D83 2012 South Africa's struggle for human rights | JC599 .D83 2012 South Africa's struggle for human rights | JC599 .E37 1999 East Asian challenge for human rights / | JC599 .E87 2019 Expanding perspectives on human rights in Africa / | JC599 .E87 2019 Expanding perspectives on human rights in Africa / | JC599 .E87 2019 Expanding perspectives on human rights in Africa / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"The "Asian values" argument within the international human rights debate holds that not all Asian states can be or should be expected to protect human rights to the same degree due to varying levels of economic, political, and legal development and to differing cultural views on the virtues and necessity of freedom. This position of "cultural relativism," often used by authoritarian governments in Asia to counter charges of human rights violations, has been dismissed by many Western and Asian human rights advocates as a weak excuse. The East Asian Challenge for Human Rights moves beyond the politicized rhetoric that has dogged this debate to identify the more persuasive contributions by East Asian intellectuals to the evolving international debate on human rights." "The editors of this book argue that critical intellectuals in East Asia have begun to chart a middle ground between the extreme, uncompromising ends of this argument."--BOOK JACKET.
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