Nickel essay published in 'Human Rights Quarterly'

11/17/2008

Nickel essay published in 'Human Rights Quarterly' 

James Nickel 
James Nickel 
      An essay by Professor James Nickel, "Rethinking Indivisibility: Towards a Theory of Supporting Relations between Human Rights," recently was published by Human Rights Quarterly.
     "Indivisibility is the idea that no human right can be fully realized without fully realizing all other human rights," the essay abstract states. "When indivisibility occurs it has the practical consequence that countries cannot pick and choose among rights.
     "This article offers a framework for understanding supporting relations between rights and gives a number of arguments against strong claims of indivisibility. A central thesis is that the strength of supporting relations between rights varies with quality of implementation. Rights with low quality implementation provide little support to other rights. This is why early UN formulations of indivisibility said that it occurs when the rights in question are fully realized. Even if strong claims about the indivisibility were true under high quality implementation, they would be of limited relevance to developing countries because high quality implementation of rights is generally not an immediate possibility in those countries. Developing countries do not run afoul of indivisibility if they implement some rights before others."
     To read the entire essay, go to http://homepages.law.asu.edu/~jnickel/indiv reprint.pdf.
     Nickel, who is visiting at Georgetown University Law Center this year, is an affiliate professor in the Department of Philosophy and in the School of Global Studies. He teaches and writes in human rights law and theory, constitutional law, jurisprudence, and political philosophy.
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