Oxford Journal of Legal Studies Advance Access published online on September 30, 2009
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, doi:10.1093/ojls/gqp025
Griffin on Human Rights
Correspondence: *Philosophy Department, University of Reading. Email: b.w.hooker{at}reading.ac.uk
| Abstract |
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This review article considers James Griffin's book On Human Rights, which is an immensely important contribution to moral and political thought. The review article starts by explaining why Griffin thinks that the term human right suffers from an unacceptable indeterminateness of sense, and then summarizes Griffin's objections to various prominent accounts of human rights. An outline of Griffin's own account of human rights follows. His theory grounds human rights in personhood and practicalities. The final section of the article explores Griffin's objections to rule-consequentialism's approach to human rights.