ABSTRACT
Rights brings together the most influential essays of the last thirty years critiquing and defending the liberal rights tradition. Modern 'rights critics' have focused on the perceived conflict between liberal rights and progressive or egalitarian political objectives, the preference of liberal states for negative over positive rights and also the dangers to community of the overly atomistic conception of human nature, which is arguably at the heart of the liberal rights tradition.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I The Liberal Rights Tradition
part |2 pages
Part II Rights Critiques
part |2 pages
Part III Aspirational Rights: Possibilities and Histories
part |2 pages
Part IV Rights Redux