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Sep 9, 1950 — —· 75 yrs

TURKEY AUTHOR · CITIZENSHIP · PHILOSOPHY

Seyla Benhabib

20
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Turkish Jewish professor of political science and philosophy at Yale

Istanbul, Turkey
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The emergence of culture as an arena of intense political controversy is one of the most puzzling aspects of our current condition.

— from The Claims of Culture, 2002

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#2

Dignity in Adversity

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The language of human rights has become the public vocabulary of our contemporary world. Ironically, as the political influence of human rights has grown, their philosophical justification has become ever more controversial. Building on a theory of discourse ethics and communicative rationality, this book addresses the politics and philosophy of human rights against the background of the broader social transformations that are shaping the modern world. Rejecting the reduction of international human rights to the Trojan horse of a neo-liberal empire's bid for world power, as well as the conservative objections to legal cosmopolitanism as encroachments upon democratic sovereignty, Benhabib develops two key concepts to move beyond these false antitheses. International human rights norms need contextualization in specific polities through processes of what she calls 'democratic iterations.' Furthermore, such norms have a 'jurisgenerative power, ' in that they enable new actors to enter fields of social and political contestation; they promote new vocabularies for public claim-making and anticipate a justice to come. -- Book Description.

#1

The Tanner lectures on human values

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#3

Transformations of citizenship

2001

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