03671oam 2200613I 450 991097415860332120251117090103.01-138-25833-41-315-25236-81-351-92782-510.4324/9781315252360 (CKB)3710000001081848(MiAaPQ)EBC4816734(Au-PeEL)EBL4816734(CaPaEBR)ebr11355921(CaONFJC)MIL997510(OCoLC)975225535(OCoLC)974711214(BIP)58361642(BIP)8823969(EXLCZ)99371000000108184820180706e20162003 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierIndividual duty within a human rights discourse /Douglas Hodgson1st ed.London :Routledge,2016.1 online resource (292 pages)Applied Legal PhilosophyFirst published 2003 by Ashgate Publishing.0-7546-2361-0 1-351-92783-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.1. Introduction -- 2. The historical development of the principle of duty and its contemporary philosophical sources -- 3. The taxonomy of duties -- 4. Religion, ethics and the principle of lndividual duty -- 5. Individual criminal responsibility under international law -- 6. The position of individual duty within the international and regional human rights system -- 7. Particular individual duties explicitly recognised under international and regional human rights law and by national law -- 8. Socialism and individual duty -- 9. Impoverished 'rights talk', the sociology of duty and the re-emergence of communitarianism -- 10. The enforcement of individual duties -- 11. Conclusion.Over the past two decades or so, legal literature has devoted much attention to various human rights issues at both the national and international levels. Yet there has been comparatively little written on the concept and importance of individual duty within the human rights discourse. This book attempts to comprehensively and systematically examine the corollary of human right - the principle of individual duty - from a number of different perspectives, including history, the law (principally international human rights and humanitarian law and national constitutional law), philosophy, jurisprudence, religion, and ethics. The author attempts to demonstrate that a greater emphasis upon individual duties is consistent with a cultural relativist critique, natural law theory, the experience of national legal systems and regional human rights systems, certain socio-political philosophies and conventional sociological postulates, and the dictates of good public policy. The author urges the assignment of a greater, indeed revived, role for the principle of individual duty in order to achieve a more salutary balance between rights and duties and in the relationship between individual freedom and the welfare of the general community.Applied legal philosophy.Human rightsHuman rightsMoral and ethical aspectsDutyHuman rights.Human rightsMoral and ethical aspects.Duty.340/.112Hodgson Douglas.568183MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910974158603321Individual duty within a human rights discourse1039850UNINA