On Human Rights (Record no. 44489)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 04491nam a2200229 a 4500
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
control field nice12345678
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field Monogr.mrc
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20211215120937.0
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9780199238781
Terms of availability
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency DC
082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number G89.1
Item number G875
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Griffin, James.
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title On Human Rights
Statement of responsibility, etc. James Griffin.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Oxford
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Oxford University Press
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2008
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 339p
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note includes index and biblioraphy
505 2# - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note PART I: AN ACCOUNT OF HUMAN RIGHTS<br/>1. Human Rights: The Incomplete Idea 9<br/>1.1 The Enlightenment project on human rights 9<br/>1.2 The indeterminateness of the term`human right` 14<br/>1.3 Remedies for the indeterminateness 18<br/>1.4 Different approaches to explaining rights: substantive and structural accounts <br/>1.5 A different kind of substantive account 22<br/>1.6 How should we go about completing the idea? 27<br/>2. First Steps in an Account of Human Rights 29<br/>2.1 Top-down and bottom-up accounts 29<br/>2.2 The human rights tradition 30<br/>2.3 A proposal of a substantive account 32<br/>2.4 One ground for human rights: personhood 33<br/>2.5 A second ground: practicalities 37<br/>2.6 Is there a third ground?: equality 39<br/>2.7 How we should understand `agency`? 44<br/>2.8 In what sense are human rights `universal`? 48<br/>2.9 Do we need a more pluralist account? 51<br/>3. When Human Rights Conflict 57<br/>3.1 One of the central questions of ethics 57<br/>3.2 Conflicts between human rights themselves 58<br/>3.3 Are human rights co-possible? 60 <br/>3.4 Conflicts between a human right and other kinds of moral consideration 63<br/>3.5 A proposal and a qualification 66<br/>3.6 A step beyond intuition 76<br/>3.7 Some ways in which human rights resist trade-offs 79<br/>3.8 Reprise 81<br/>4. Whose Rights? 83<br/>4.1 The scope of the question 83<br/>4.2 Potential agents 83<br/>4.3 The inference from moral weight to human rights 86<br/>4.4 Need accounts of human rights 88<br/>4.5 A class of rights on their own? 90<br/>4.6 A role for stipulation 91<br/>4.7 Coming into rights in stages 94<br/>5. My Rights: But Whose Duties? 96<br/>5.1 Introduction 96<br/>5.2 What duties? 97<br/>5.3 Whose duties? 101<br/>5.4 Primary and secondary duties 104<br/>5.5 AIDS in Africa 105<br/>5.6 Can there be rights without indentifiable duty-bearers? 107<br/>6. The Metaphysics of Human Rights 111<br/>6.1 Two models of value judgement 111<br/>6.2 Human interests and the natural world 116<br/>6.3 The test of the best explanation 121<br/>6.4 The metaphysics of human rights 124<br/>7. The Relativity and Ethnocentricity of Human Rights 129<br/>7.1 Ethical relativity 129<br/>7.2 The relativity of human rights 133<br/>7.3 What is the problem of ethnocentricity? 137<br/>7.4 Tolerance 142<br/>Contents PART II: HIGHEST-LEVEL HUMAN RIGHTS<br/>8. Autonomy 149<br/>8.1 The three highest-level human rights 149<br/>8.2 The distinction between autonomy and liberty 149<br/>8.3 The value of autonomy 151<br/>8.4 The content of the right to autonomy 152<br/>8.5 Autonomy and free will: what if we are not autonomous? 157<br/>9. Liberty 159<br/>9.1 Highest-level rights 159<br/>9.2 Broad and narrow interpretations of liberty 159<br/>9.3 `Pursuit` 160<br/>9.4 Negative and positive sides of liberty 166<br/>9.5 How demanding is the right? 167<br/>9.6 Mill`s `one very simple principle` of liberty 169<br/>9.7 Generalizing the results 174<br/>10. Welfare 176<br/>10.1 The historical growth of rights 176<br/>10.2 Welfare: a civil, not a human, right? 177<br/>10.3 A case for a human right to welfare 179<br/>10.4 Is the proposed right too demanding? 182<br/>10.5 The undeserving poor 184<br/>10.6 Human rights, legal rights, and rights in the United Nations 186<br/>PART III: APPLICATIONS<br/>11. Human Rights: Discrepancies Between Philosophy and International Law 191<br/>11.1 Applications of the personhood account 191<br/>11.2 Bringing philosophical theory and legal practice together 191<br/>11.3 The list of human rights that emerges from the personhood account<br/>11.4 Current legal lists: civil and political rights<br/>11.5 Interlude on the aims and status of international law<br/>11.6 Current legal lists: economic, social, and cultural rights<br/>11.7 The future of international lists of human rights<br/>12. A Right to Life, a Right to Death<br/>12.1 The scope of the right to life<br/>12.2 Locke on the scope of the right<br/>12.3 Personhood as the ground of the right<br/>12.4 From a right to life to a right to death<br/>12.5 Is there a right to death?<br/>12.6 Is it a positive or a negative right?<br/>13. Privacy<br/>13.1 Personhood and the content of a human right to privacy<br/>13.2 Legal
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name
902 ## - LOCAL DATA ELEMENT B, LDB (RLIN)
b FFC
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type Books
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Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Materials specified (bound volume or other part) Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Cost, normal purchase price Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Cost, replacement price Price effective from Koha item type
    Dewey Decimal Classification HB     DVK Library DVK Library Stack -> First Floor -> G 15/12/2021 3484.00   G89.1 G875 22110062 19/05/2021 3484.00 11/01/2020 Books

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