Article contents
Human Rights between Jurisprudence and Social Science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2015
Abstract
This article argues that human rights law – which mediates between claims about universal human nature, on the one hand, and hard-fought political battles, on the other – is in particular need of a richer exchange between jurisprudential approaches and social science theory and methods. Using the example of the Inter-American Human Rights System, the article calls for more human rights scholarship with a new realist sensibility. It demonstrates in what ways legal and social science scholarship on human rights law both stand to improve through sustained, thoughtful exchange.
Keywords
- Type
- INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY: International Law and its Methodology
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2015
References
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35 Ibid., at 69.
36 See, e.g., Colombian Constitutional Court, Judgment C-04 2003.
37 Colombia has a Supreme Court and a Constitutional Court.
38 The author is a member of this network.
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41 Note that several chapters of the volume already engage the questions of political context and empirical study. See, e.g., A. Malamud, ‘El Contexto del Diálogo Jurídico Interamericano: Fragmentación y Diferenciación en Sociedades Más Prósperas’, 107–24 and O. Parra Vera, ‘El Impacto de las Decisiones Interamericanas: Notas sobre la producción académica y una propuesta de investigación en torno al ‘empoderamiento institucional’ 383–420 in von Bogdandy, supra note 42.
42 Other treaties, such as those underlying the World Trade Organization or the Kyoto Protocol, more clearly claim roots in political compromise. While the criminal courts also have idealistic roots, concern with due process demands a more text-based interpretive approach.
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