10.1353/hrq.2007.0030">
 

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2007

Rights

In Copyright

Abstract

This article interrogates the processes and politics of standard setting in human rights. It traces the history of the human rights project and critically explores how the norms of the human rights movement have been created. This article looks at how those norms are made, who makes them, and why. It focuses attention on the deficits of the international order, and how that order - which is defined by multiple asymmetries - determines the norms and the purposes they serve. It identifies areas for further norm development and concludes that norm-creating processes must be inclusive and participatory to garner legitimacy across various divides.

Publication Title

Human Rights Quarterly

First Page

547

Last Page

630

Comments

Copyright © 2007 The Johns Hopkins University Press. This article was first published in Human Rights Quarterly 29.3 (2007), 547–630. Reprinted with permission by Johns Hopkins University Press.

Required Text

Copyright © 2007 The Johns Hopkins University Press. This article was first published in Human Rights Quarterly 29.3 (2007), 547–630. Reprinted with permission by Johns Hopkins University Press.

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