Rights, Capabilities and the Good Society

IF 1 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW
R. West
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

In Part I this essay explores and then criticizes the two major arguments behind the conventional wisdom that rights undermine efforts to secure a state role in ensuring the material preconditions for a good society, and therefore, the material preconditions for the development of those human capabilities essential to a fully human life. I conclude in this part that this understanding of rights is mistaken. In Part II, I urge that the pragmatic argument put forward by rights critics and some welfare advocates for forgoing rights-talk and rights-rhetoric also fails: there are very real costs, both in theory and in law, in deciding to forgo putting the case for the state's obligation to provide minimal material goods in terms of rights. In Part III, I briefly describe two core rights that a refashioned liberal state, understood as a vehicle for protecting not just the liberty but also the capabilities of citizens, should recognize: first, a right to be protected against private violence, and second, a right of caregivers to give care to dependents without incurring the risk of severe impoverishment or subordination – a right, to use the provocative phrase coined by the philosopher Eva Kittay, to doulia. Both rights, I think, are directly entailed by the state's obligation to provide the minimal preconditions for the development of those fundamental human capabilities that are themselves essential to a fully human life. Both rights however, could be and should be conceived in the most traditionally liberal terms. The first such right – the right to protection against private violence – although now disfavored in United States rights discourse, seems fully authorized by both the liberal tradition and the American Constitution itself. The second right for which I will argue – the right to provide care to dependents has no similar basis of support in either liberal theory or American constitutionalism. It is not incompatible with either, however, and is at least arguably required by the deepest commitments of both. The right to protection and the right to care are rights that can be framed in liberal terms, and both rights would go a long way toward securing for individual citizens the minimal preconditions of a good society.
权利、能力与美好社会
在第一部分中,本文探讨并批评了传统智慧背后的两个主要论点,即权利破坏了确保国家在确保良好社会的物质先决条件方面所做的努力,因此,这些人类能力发展的物质先决条件对于完整的人类生活至关重要。我在这一部分的结论是,这种对权利的理解是错误的。在第二部分中,我强调,权利批评家和一些福利倡导者提出的实用主义论点,即放弃权利言论和权利言论,也失败了:在理论上和法律上,决定放弃国家在权利方面提供最低限度物质商品的义务,都是非常现实的成本。在第三部分,我简要地描述了两个核心权利,一个重塑的自由主义国家,被理解为不仅保护公民的自由,而且保护公民的能力,应该承认:第一,保护免受私人暴力的权利,第二,照顾者照顾被抚养者的权利,而不会招致严重贫困或从属的风险——用哲学家伊娃·基泰创造的挑衅性短语来说,这是一种权利。我认为,这两项权利都直接与国家的义务有关,即为人类基本能力的发展提供最低限度的先决条件,而这些基本能力本身对于完整的人类生活至关重要。然而,这两种权利都可以而且应该用最传统的自由主义术语来理解。第一项权利——免受私人暴力侵害的权利——虽然现在在美国的权利论述中不受欢迎,但似乎得到了自由主义传统和美国宪法本身的充分授权。我要论证的第二项权利——为家属提供照顾的权利,在自由主义理论或美国宪政中都没有类似的支持基础。然而,它与两者都不是不相容的,而且至少可以说是两者最深刻的承诺所要求的。受保护的权利和受照顾的权利是可以用自由主义的术语来定义的权利,这两项权利都将大大有助于为公民个人确保一个良好社会的最低先决条件。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Fordham Law Review is a scholarly journal serving the legal profession and the public by discussing current legal issues. Approximately 75 articles, written by students or submitted by outside authors, are published each year. Each volume comprises six books, three each semester, totaling over 3,000 pages. Managed by a board of up to eighteen student editors, the Law Review is a working journal, not merely an honor society. Nevertheless, Law Review membership is considered among the highest scholarly achievements at the Law School.
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