Human Rights and Capitalism: A Multidisciplinary Perspective on GlobalisationJanet Dine, A. Fagan Edward Elgar Publishing, 2006. gada 1. janv. - 400 lappuses Human Rights and Capitalism brings together two important facets of the globalization debate and examines the complex relationship between human rights, property rights and capitalist economies. Human rights issues have become increasingly important in th |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 96.
ix. lappuse
... society in which Christian constraints and mercantilist goals were displaced by a secular society with limited government and a capitalist economy.' A further dimension of Locke's theories is their relationship with colonialism. This ...
... society in which Christian constraints and mercantilist goals were displaced by a secular society with limited government and a capitalist economy.' A further dimension of Locke's theories is their relationship with colonialism. This ...
x. lappuse
... societies are constitutively incapable of recognising and responding to the inequalities which capitalist relations create and re- quire. Leader cautions against drawing an overly optimistic conclusion that the mere extension of human ...
... societies are constitutively incapable of recognising and responding to the inequalities which capitalist relations create and re- quire. Leader cautions against drawing an overly optimistic conclusion that the mere extension of human ...
xi. lappuse
... society has designed companies to be profit maximisation machines means that they will inevitably fail this test . The property rights debate is relevant here and it is important to understand different underlying political viewpoints ...
... society has designed companies to be profit maximisation machines means that they will inevitably fail this test . The property rights debate is relevant here and it is important to understand different underlying political viewpoints ...
xii. lappuse
... society, full human rights can only be delivered by institutions established by socie- ties. The paradox is that societies (now global) have a great capacity for human rights violations. This tension reflects the historic tensions ...
... society, full human rights can only be delivered by institutions established by socie- ties. The paradox is that societies (now global) have a great capacity for human rights violations. This tension reflects the historic tensions ...
xiii. lappuse
... society . In a search for justice , law must therefore establish methods of taking account not only of its political , economic and social context but of the internal reasoning which disciplines concerned with those contexts use in ...
... society . In a search for justice , law must therefore establish methods of taking account not only of its political , economic and social context but of the internal reasoning which disciplines concerned with those contexts use in ...
Saturs
1 Beyond capitalism and socialism | 3 |
2 Inflating consent inflating function and inserting human rights | 28 |
3 Using companies to oppress the poor | 48 |
Paradoxontology law and social movements | 80 |
Consuming ethically and human rights | 115 |
PART II Specific issues | 143 |
UK initiatives and a Nigerian perspective | 145 |
Technology transfer in a development perspective | 169 |
9 WTO member states and the right to health | 228 |
Reforming WTO trading rules to take account of reparations | 254 |
11 The UN Norms | 284 |
PART III Focus on South America | 301 |
The example of Argentina | 303 |
13 Development democracy and human rights in Latin America 19762000 | 330 |
358 | |
Enforcing the Right to Development through economic law | 198 |
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affluent African analysis Argentina Argentinean argues Article bilateral capitalism capitalist claim commitments companies company law competition law compulsory licensing concept Congress constitutional consumer context contract corporate debt repayment democracy democratic developing countries domestic economic effect employees enterprise ethical shopping example exports foreign debt freedom functional global globalisation Guyana Ibid impact implementation individual institutional racism institutions intellectual property rights interests international trade investment issues justice labour Landman licensing Marrakesh Agreement ment moral natural rights NGOs Norms obligations organisation organizations Pogge political potential poverty production promote protection racism realization regime regulation relations relationship reparations Report requires responsibility right to development right to health shareholders social society technology transfer theory tion trade rules transnationals treaty TRIPS Agreement UNCTAD University of Essex University Press violations World World Bank World Trade Organisation WTO members