Details

The Architecture of Rights


The Architecture of Rights

Models and Theories

von: David Frydrych

85,59 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 13.10.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9783030760397
Sprache: englisch

Dieses eBook enthält ein Wasserzeichen.

Beschreibungen

<p>What is a right? What, if anything, makes rights different from other features of the normative world, such as duties, standards, rules, or principles? Do all rights serve some ultimate purpose? In addition to raising these questions, philosophers and jurists have long been aware that different senses of ‘a right’ abound. To help make sense of this diversity, and to&nbsp;address&nbsp;the above questions, they developed two types of accounts of rights: models and theories. This book explicates rights modelling and theorising and&nbsp;scrutinises their methodological underpinnings. It then challenges this framework by showing why the theories ought to be abandoned. In addition to exploring structural concerns, the book&nbsp;also&nbsp;addresses the various ways that rights can be used. It clarifies important differences between rights exercise, enforcement, remedying, and vindication, and identifies forms of legal rights-claiming and rights-invoking outside of institutional contexts.</p><br><br>
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Rights Modelling.- Chapters 3: Rights Correlativity.- Chapter 4: Rights Exercise and Enforcement.- Chapter 5: The Theories of Rights Debate.- Chapter 6: The Case Against the Theories.- Chapter 7: Legal Rights Enforcement.- Chapter 8: Imperfect Legal Rights.- Chapter 9: Claims and Invocations of Right.- Chapter 10: The Conceptual Contingency of Perimeters of Support.
<p><b>David Frydrych</b> is a lecturer at Monash University’s Faculty of Law. His research concerns jurisprudence, rights, and trusts. </p>
<p>What is a right? What, if anything, makes rights different from other features of the normative world, such as duties, standards, rules, or principles? Do all rights serve some ultimate purpose? In addition to raising these questions, philosophers and jurists have long been aware that different senses of ‘a right’ abound. To help make sense of this diversity, and to&nbsp;address&nbsp;the above questions, they developed two types of accounts of rights: models and theories. This book explicates rights modelling and theorising and&nbsp;scrutinises their methodological underpinnings. It then challenges this framework by showing why the theories ought to be abandoned. In addition to exploring structural concerns, the book&nbsp;also&nbsp;addresses the various ways that rights can be used. It clarifies important differences between rights exercise, enforcement, remedying, and vindication, and identifies forms of legal rights-claiming and rights-invoking outside of institutional contexts.&nbsp;<br></p>

<p><b>David Frydrych</b>&nbsp;is a lecturer at Monash University’s Faculty of Law. His research concerns jurisprudence, rights, and trusts.<br></p><br>
Presents an account of how we should philosophize about rights Explains models and theories, and expands the fields horizons in discussing the ways in which rights can be used and vindicated Argues that there are important differences amongst rights exercise, enforcement, remedying, and vindication

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