Human dignity and the future of global institutions /Mark P. Lagon and Anthony Clark Arend, editors. - Washington, DC : Georgetown University Press, (c)2014. - 1 online resource.

Includes bibliographies and index.

Preface / Introduction -- Human dignity in a neomedieval world / Traditional institutions -- The United Nations Security Council / The responsibility to respect: victims and human dignity at the international criminal court / The UN Secretary-General and human dignity: the case of Kofi Annan / Regional security organizations and human dignity / Inclusive growth, institutions, and the underground economy / The global human rights regime: assessing and renovating the architecture / The human dignity lens on terrorism and counterterrorism / Emerging institutions -- Transcending HIV/AIDS social stigma: putting human dignity center stage in global institutions / The new global landscape for poverty alleviation and development: foundations, NGOs, social media, and other private sector institutions / Statelessness, sovereignty, and international law: promoting the right to have rights / Fighting human trafficking: transformative versus cotton-candy partnerships / Religion and the global politics of human dignity: the Catholic Church and beyond / Faith-based institutions and human dignity: a growing presence on the global stage / Business, human rights, and the internet: a framework for implementation / Institutions and values: the future -- Constructing a dialogue on dignity: the path ahead / Contributors. John J. DeGioia -- Mark P. Lagon and Anthony Clark Arend -- Nancy E. Soderberg -- Tod Lindberg -- Abiodun Williams -- Chester A. Crocker -- Anoop Singh -- Mark P. Lagon and Ryan Kaminski -- Anthony Clark Arend -- Rosalia Rodriguez-Garcia -- Raj M. Desai and Homi Kharas -- Benjamin Boudreaux -- Mark P. Lagon -- Thomas Banchoff -- Nicole Bibbins Sedaca -- Michael A. Samway -- Mark P. Lagon and Anthony Clark Arend --

The 21st century has witnessed a proliferation of international institutions, including traditional intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental organizations, private sector entities, and other partnerships. The premise of this anthology is that these institutions need a common, animating principle in the service of the person, which is the ultimate end of global politics. The concept of human dignity, the editors claim, serves this purpose and transcends the seemingly intractable conflicts in human rights debates: political rights volume social and economic rights. Conceptually, human dignity rests on two principles: exercising agency to realize one's potential, and recognition by society of one's worth. In light of this formulation of human dignity, the anthology has two purposes: First, contributors will examine the degree to which traditional and emerging institutions are already advancing human dignity as a central mission. Second, in the spirit of developing best practices and prescriptive recommendations, contributors will identify strategies, methods, and modalities to make human dignity more central to the work of global institutions.



9781626161214


Human rights.
Dignity.
Respect for persons--Law and legislation.


Electronic Books.

JC571 / .H863 2014