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Book: Rights in Divided Societies

TitleRights in Divided Societies
Editors
Issue Date2012
PublisherHart Publishing.
Citation
Harvey, C & Schwartz, AD (Eds.). Rights in Divided Societies. Oxford: Hart Publishing. 2012 How to Cite?
AbstractThis collection examines the role and value of rights in divided and post-conflict societies, approaching the subject from a comparative and theoretical perspective. Societies emerging from violent conflict often opt for a bill of rights as part of a wider package of constitutional reform. Where conflict is fuelled by longstanding ethno-national divisions, these divisions are often addressed through group-differentiated rights. Recent constitutional settlements have highlighted the difficulties in drafting a bill of rights in divided/post-conflict societies, where the aim of promoting unity is frequently in tension with the need to accommodate difference. In such cases, a bill of rights might be a rallying point around which both minorities and the majority can articulate a common vision for a shared society. Conversely, a bill of rights might provide merely another venue in which to play out familiar conflicts, further dividing an already divided society. The central questions that animate the collection are: (1) Can constitutional rights provide a basis for unity and a common 'human rights culture' in divided societies? If so, how? (2) To what extent should divided societies opt for a universalistic package of rights protections, or should the rights be tailored to the specific circumstances of a divided society, providing for special group-sensitive protections for minorities? (3) Is a divided society more or less likely to adopt a bill of rights? (4) How does the judiciary figure in the management or resolution of ethno-national conflict? (5) What are the general theoretical and philosophical issues at stake in a rights-based approach to the management or resolution of ethno-national divisions or other conflicts?
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/249252
ISBN
Series/Report no.Human Rights Law in Perspective (Book 17)

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.editorHarvey, C-
dc.contributor.editorSchwartz, AD-
dc.date.accessioned2017-11-09T04:47:56Z-
dc.date.available2017-11-09T04:47:56Z-
dc.date.issued2012-
dc.identifier.citationHarvey, C & Schwartz, AD (Eds.). Rights in Divided Societies. Oxford: Hart Publishing. 2012-
dc.identifier.isbn9781847319807-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/249252-
dc.description.abstractThis collection examines the role and value of rights in divided and post-conflict societies, approaching the subject from a comparative and theoretical perspective. Societies emerging from violent conflict often opt for a bill of rights as part of a wider package of constitutional reform. Where conflict is fuelled by longstanding ethno-national divisions, these divisions are often addressed through group-differentiated rights. Recent constitutional settlements have highlighted the difficulties in drafting a bill of rights in divided/post-conflict societies, where the aim of promoting unity is frequently in tension with the need to accommodate difference. In such cases, a bill of rights might be a rallying point around which both minorities and the majority can articulate a common vision for a shared society. Conversely, a bill of rights might provide merely another venue in which to play out familiar conflicts, further dividing an already divided society. The central questions that animate the collection are: (1) Can constitutional rights provide a basis for unity and a common 'human rights culture' in divided societies? If so, how? (2) To what extent should divided societies opt for a universalistic package of rights protections, or should the rights be tailored to the specific circumstances of a divided society, providing for special group-sensitive protections for minorities? (3) Is a divided society more or less likely to adopt a bill of rights? (4) How does the judiciary figure in the management or resolution of ethno-national conflict? (5) What are the general theoretical and philosophical issues at stake in a rights-based approach to the management or resolution of ethno-national divisions or other conflicts?-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherHart Publishing.-
dc.relation.ispartofseriesHuman Rights Law in Perspective (Book 17)-
dc.titleRights in Divided Societies-
dc.typeBook-
dc.identifier.emailSchwartz, AD: schwartz@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.authoritySchwartz, AD=rp02284-
dc.publisher.placeOxford-

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