Menneskerettigheter Og Ulike Verdisyn: Vestlige Mot Asiatiske Verdier?

Gunnerusforelesningen. " Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskab Forhandlinger. Trondheim, pp: 105-21, 1999

15 Pages Posted: 23 Jan 2011

Date Written: 1999

Abstract

Few states admit that they systematically and deliberately violate international human rights. The Bangkok Declaration of 1993 ended this public consensus. In this declaration several Asian states argued that civil and political human rights must be set aside insofar as they are incompatible with "Asian values". Foreign protests against human rights were also dismissed as violating states' sovereignty.The lecture discusses and rebuts the criticism raised in the Bangkok Declaration. Several objections against international human rights are identified and assessed on the basis of theories of human rights.Claims to thorough-going differences between Asian and Western cultures do not stand against criticisms, and few objections against human rights can be maintained. The remaining objections do not invalidate human rights, but support some justifications for human rights rather than others. Thus human rights cannot be dismissed as objectionable exercises of Western ideological imperialism.

Note: Downloadable document is in Norwegian.

Keywords: human rights, Bangkok Declaration, Asian Values, Western Culture

Suggested Citation

Follesdal, Andreas, Menneskerettigheter Og Ulike Verdisyn: Vestlige Mot Asiatiske Verdier? (1999). Gunnerusforelesningen. " Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskab Forhandlinger. Trondheim, pp: 105-21, 1999, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1744111 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1744111

Andreas Follesdal (Contact Author)

Pluricourts ( email )

P.O. Box 6706
St. Olavs plass 5
0130 Oslo
Norway

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