Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

The Relationship Between Democracy and Human Rights

Profile image of Kiersten E Davis

Related Papers

luigi caranti

democracy and human rights essay pdf

Richard Burchill

Sulaksana Hasan Rabbani

Democracy is a governmental system which allows the people to fully participate in the process. what makes it so interesting when it comes to a person inside the system that has many different kinds of things to live with and why is it crucial to know what human rights is.

munashe mushonga

Pablo Gilabert

Ethics & International Affairs

Michael Goodhart

International Research Journal Commerce arts science

"The will of the general population will be the premise of the expert of government" .The word 'vote based system' does not show up in the United Nations (UN) Charter. Notwithstanding, with the opening expressions of that document; 'We the People of United Nations', the organizer summoned the most fundamental standard of vote based system, establishing the sovereign expert of the part States, and in this manner the authenticity of the association which they were to form, in the will of their people groups. Their commitment to popular government was additionally reflected in the expressed 'purposes' of the UN, which incorporate; regarding the guideline of equivalent rights and fundamental flexibilities for all without refinement.

Johny Koynja

Human rights (HAM) in essence a category das sollen and not category das turn indicator. What was formed in the Charter of the United Nations on Human Rights, first el is seen as an ideal ideals that must be fulfilled and run by a civilized society and is not the reality that has been there empirical and can be understood in life every day. The conceptions human rights, has a wide spectrum and showed power attraction between the role of the state and the role of state in its implementation. Pluralism culture is not with all by itself forced the emerg ence pluralism human rights or pluralism democracy or pluralism justice. Pluralism as it is a big possibility can only lead to relativism values. Basically, human rights (HAM) is a "das Sollen" catagory, It has formulated on The Universal Declaration of Human R ights and containing the principle of ideal that should be implemented by civilized community, and not empirical existing that perceivable by layman or the man in the street. Human Rights (HAM) conception has wide spectrum and shows us dichotomy related with implementations, especially between state and role of citizen. The cultural of pluralism not automatically should be pluralism of human rights or democracy, pluralism or justice, pluralism. It could be possibility to relativism of value. Key word : Democracy, Conception of Human Right's, Cultural Pluralism.

Katerina N A S T O V S K A Trpkovska

EQUALITY, DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA . Theoretically, equality and democracy represent a natural and inseparable unity. Equality exists in democracy, that is, in a regime in which the ruler and the entity are united in one person-citizen. And vice versa: democracy is only possible with free citizens - equal before the law. The main goal of the paper is to offer a concept on the relationship between human rights and democracy with a special focus on the situation in the Republic of Macedonia. Key words democracy, human rights, law, equality

Indiana International & Comparative Law Review

Joseph Zand

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.

RELATED PAPERS

Tanja Karakamisheva-Jovanovska

Ziauddin Sardar

Simon Kang'ethe Mwangi

Anglican theological review

Barney Pityana

Morton H Halperin , Morton H Halperin

Annabelle Lever

Saint Louis University Public Law Review

Christoph Hanisch

Journal of Global Ethics

Christian Barry

Tetsu Sakurai

Jack Sigman

Willy Purna Samadhi

Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights

Fabienne Peter

Human Rights Review

Jamie Mayerfeld

Péter Kállai

Kalpana Sathish

Sine Bagatur

Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly

conor gearty

Steven Wheatley

Notre Dame L. Rev.

John O. McGinnis

Matija Žgur

Christophe Barbey

Sharon Healey

Ani Rukhadze

papers.ssrn.com

Iulia Antoanella Motoc

Sociology Study

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024
  • DOI: 10.17645/PAG.V6I1.1186
  • Corpus ID: 55947837

Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships

  • Published 19 March 2018
  • Political Science
  • Politics and Governance

Figures and Tables from this paper

figure 1

29 Citations

Why choice matters: revisiting and comparing measures of democracy, version why choice matters : revisiting and comparing measures of democracy politics and governance provided in cooperation with : wzb berlin, public interest and good governance in the rule of law aspect, how to measure dictatorship, dissent, and political repression, human rights during transition: accountability mechanisms in mexican states 1997–2008, stay off my field: policing boundaries in human rights and democracy promotion, democracy and gender and sexual minority rights: brazil, bulgaria and namibia compared - how can we understand the importance of democracy to furthering lgbtq human rights.

  • Highly Influenced

Human Rights in a Time of Populism: Philippines under Rodrigo Duterte

Democracy under threat: study of the implementation of the rights of indigenous peoples to the management of natural resources in riau province, norms of democracy and human rights within asean non-intervention principle analysis of forum-asia's participation in facilitating dialogues for humanitarian conflict resolution in myanmar in 2021, 58 references, comparative politics and human rights, inequality and human rights: who controls what, when, and how.

  • Highly Influential

Citizenship Rights and Social Movements: A Comparative and Statistical Analysis

The political science of human rights, thinking inside the box: a closer look at democracy and human rights, measuring democracy: a bridge between scholarship and politics, democracy and the concept of personal integrity rights, democracies: forms, performance, and constitutional engineering, fulfilling social and economic rights, respect for human rights has improved over time: modeling the changing standard of accountability, related papers.

Showing 1 through 3 of 0 Related Papers

Human Rights and Democracy: An Incompatible or Complementary Relationship?

Image by CMMooney

Introduction

The purpose of human rights is to allow for a transcendence of the nation state in terms of individual entitlement to an enjoyment of rights wherever individuals may find themselves (Landman 2013, 26). However, with respect to the varying philosophical and historical foundations of human rights, the supposed universality of human rights is debatable. States that reliably receive praise for their human rights records include most European countries, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. What these countries have in common is a democratic political system and independent judiciaries that protect citizen rights (Posner 2014, 5). This observable fact would lead us to believe that democratic institutions are necessary for a thorough protection of human rights. However, in a non-cosmopolitan context, the logic of democracy necessitates constructing a barrier between those who belong to the demos and those excluded (Mouffe 2000, 4). This creates the condition for the existence of democratic citizenship rights. It also challenges the supposed universality of human rights, since those excluded from the demos, such as refugees, stateless persons or the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, have no government to protect their supposedly natural rights.

The purpose of this essay is to traverse the tensions between human rights and democracy. It is argued that these tensions originate from the incompatible values upon which human rights and democracy were distinctly founded, the ways in which they are applied and the types of politics that they make possible. Following a short history of the emergence of human rights into the contemporary political consciousness, I explore the conflicts and paradoxes inherent to the human rights/liberalism/democracy nexus. Drawing on the work of political philosopher Chantal Mouffe, I show that there is a bifurcated mutual dependency to this relationship. One the one hand, the appeal to human rights is necessary in order to naturalise the notion of popular sovereignty for the democratic nation state. On the other hand, the democratic logic of constituting the people and bestowing rights is necessary to subvert the tendency towards the abstract universalism that is characteristic of liberal discourse (Mouffe 2000, 44).  Finally, against a discussion of the taboo against torture, the notion that the most effective way to protect human rights is through democratic institutions is considered.

A (Brief) History of Human Rights

Some scholars have argued that human rights have a centuries-long history (Ishay 2004). Others perceive them to be a modern legal construction that emerged out of the institution of citizenship rights (Moyn 2012; Posner 2014). Following the Second World War these rights were universalised via a set of agreements that generated the contemporary international regime for the promotion and protection of human rights (Donnelly 2006). In The Last Utopia , legal history scholar Samuel Moyn (2012) argues that human rights only entered the global political consciousness in the 1970s. Moyn claims that at this point in time other kinds of utopianism, such as Communism and national liberation, began to weaken. Human rights suddenly became attractive because they provided a moral discourse and a set of ethical standards superficially above politics, as well as offered a minimalist utopianism that mitigated suffering without seeking to radically transform the world (McLoughlin 2016, 304). During the same decade the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights finally took effect, the Helsinki process began, Amnesty International was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, dissident movements across the world began to adopt the language of rights and President Carter proclaimed human rights to be central to US foreign policy (Posner 2014, 19). For the Left, revolutionary aspirations started to be replaced by a global morality that sought to alleviate signs of suffering (McNeilly 2016). Human rights abuses defined authoritarianism, so human rights protection became the logical antidote to such evils. Legal theorist Daniel McLoughlin (2016, 311) argues that in this environment anti-authoritarianism legitimated capitalist liberal democracies by opposing them to a political ‘Other’ that lacked respect for human rights. While some commentators argue that the moral discourse of human rights is “the most we can hope for” (Ignatieff 2001), there are others who challenge this paradigm by contending that we need to develop a radical critique of liberal democratic state power that abandons the ‘good versus evil’ dichotomy (McNeilly 2016; Whyte 2012). This is because human rights in their current liberal form operate to reinforce existing power relations, rather than enabling their takedown.

Human Rights and Citizenship Rights – Two Peas in a Pod?

The 1776 United States Declaration of Independence and the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen are widely cited as the provenance of human rights (Landman 2013, 28). For example, human rights scholar Agostinho Reis Monteiro (2014, 373) argues that since both these declarations made the respect for human rights directly connected to the principle of popular sovereignty, these two concepts are therefore “historically, conceptually and politically indissociable.” Indeed, the Rights of Man states that ‘men are born and remain free and equal of right’, which is also a claim echoed in the opening article of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights . Here, equality and liberty are decreed as “natural entitlements” (Douzinas 2013, 55). However, the Universal Declaration is clear about the basis of universal human rights by stating that “the aim of any political association is to preserve the natural and inalienable rights of man” and that “the principle of all Sovereignty lies essentially with the nation” (Articles 2 & 3 respectively, quoted in Douzinas 2013, 55). Thus, as McLoughlin (2016, 315) argues, the political history of modern liberal democracies is characterised by the gap between “the universalism of the rights of man” and the rift between “white propertied men with full citizenship rights” and “slaves, women, workers, and people of colour” who have been traditionally excluded from the political sphere. By virtue of being allowed to participate in the political, those with citizenship rights are thus able to reify their humanity (Shaap 2013, 4).

Political philosopher Hannah Arendt (1966) interrogates this dynamic between human rights and citizenship rights in her seminal book, The Origins of Totalitarianism . Arendt critiques post-1948 human rights developments for being based on an abstraction of humanity rather than on a viable opportunity for political participation. Arendt argues that human rights only become meaningful when they are recognised in a political society. Thus, for Arendt, more significant than the right to freedom or the right to equality is “the right to have rights.” Ultimately, the problem with the rights of man is that legal rights depend upon membership to a political community. Those excluded from political communities do not have citizenship rights to protect them, so are in reality left with no rights at all. This is premised on the notion that when man and citizen are separated, we recognise that “the world finds nothing sacred in the abstract nakedness of being human” (Arendt 1966, 299). While there has since been a massive growth of the international human rights regime, Arendt’s skepticism concerning the universality of human rights still carries weight. Excluded-citizens may enjoy some human rights, but they ultimately remain the most vulnerable to persecution and expulsion (Nash 2009, 89).

Similar to Arendt, political philosopher Giorgio Agamben’s (1998, 127) analysis of the Rights of Man criticizes its assertion that the rights it affirms are bestowed to both citizen and Man. For Agamben, the universal and abstract image of Man is a modern representation of “bare life.” This metaphor reflects the existence of a human prior to belonging to the political. In Ancient Greek society the conceptual opposition between Man and citizen was expressed in a distinction between citizens who made up the polis, and the slaves, women and children who were excluded (McLoughlin 2016, 312). The modern expression of this classical separation between life and politics manifests itself in a different way. These days, liberal democracies justify their sovereign power on the need to protect the life of their citizens. To do this, modern democratic states now produce more extreme forms of political exclusion that the abstract framework of human rights is unable to address (McLoughlin 2016, 312).

Contemporary democracies are therefore inherently paradoxical because “the territorial borders of a democracy cannot themselves be democratic” (DeGooyer 2014, 101). While nation states profess to grant rights to their citizens based on their common humanity, they also exclude all those located beyond their borders in the name of maintaining national sovereignty and demarcating national identity. In this context, the refugee logically becomes an anomaly of the international system of sovereign states. According to international migration scholar Emma Haddad (2008, 69), refugees are not an indication of this system “going wrong”.  Rather, they are “an inherent if unanticipated part of the system.” Citizenship attempts to sort bare life into harmonised territories but in the process some individuals become stuck in between. In this way, the refugee demonstrates a failure of certain governments to protect their citizens and of the state system as a whole, which fails to protect all humans as citizens (Haddad 2008, 69). The refugee also becomes the necessary ‘Other’ so that national citizens of the modern state are able to forge an identity. According to Haddad (2008, 47), the rise of national identity, which attached itself to the system of international relations following the Declaration of Independence and the Rights of Man, has become “the new indicator of allegiance,” while the refugee is “the imagined outsider who allowed the concept of the nation-state to take hold.” Thus, the state and the stateless “are caught in a mutual embrace” (DeGooyer 2014, 101).  In light of this analysis, even if the most effective way to protect human rights is through democratic institutions, it seems almost disingenuous if the same human rights cannot be enjoyed by individuals excluded from the demos.

Navigating the Tension between Liberalism, Democracy and Human Rights

Political philosopher Chantal Mouffe’s theorising on the impact that liberalism has on democratic institutions helps to deconstruct the compatibility of human rights and democracy. For Mouffe (2000, 2), democracy is both a form of rule upholding the principle of the sovereignty of the people, as well as a symbolic framework within which this democratic rule is employed. What makes modern Western democracy truly ‘modern’ and ‘Western’ is that this symbolic framework is now informed by the liberal tradition constituted by the rule of law, the respect for individual liberty, protection from oppressive state interference and the defence of human rights. These values form the key tenets of the contemporary Western worldview. Conversely, the democratic tradition emphasises the values of equality, popular sovereignty and a division between the governing and the governed. Indeed, as Amartya Sen (2003) has argued, democracy as manifested through liberalism and the ballot box is a Western construct, while democracy as expressed through ‘public reason’ (in other words, deliberation) is truly universal. Mouffe (2000, 3) claims that there is no necessary connection between liberalism and democracy, “only a contingent historical articulation,” which I have explored in the preceding paragraphs. Nevertheless, there is a widespread assumption that democracy and human rights are inherently compatible (Landman 2013, 7). For Mouffe (2000, 4), this assumption has had the effect of privileging excessive liberalism, whilst neglecting the fact that the legitimacy of liberal democracy remains premised on popular sovereignty.

It thus follows that hegemony of neoliberalism becomes a threat to democratic institutions. States are the main agents in the realisation of democracy and human rights. However, globalising forces have encroached on the state’s ability to freely implement policies, including policies concerning human rights. This phenomenon has been identified as a “democratic deficit” (Mouffe 2000, 15). Here, elected governments lack the power to control neoliberal economic processes and the follow-on effects of major world crises (Cedroni 2012, 261). Indeed, one only has to consider the history of decisions made by the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organisation, which have overwhelmingly served the interests of the Global North without much concern for negative human rights consequences. Neoliberal creeds about the inviolable rights of property, the sweeping virtues of the market and the risks of interfering with its logic have become common sense in liberal-democratic societies. But as Mouffe (2000, 6) explains, the ensuing “democratic deficit” can severely threaten allegiance to democratic institutions by those citizens whose concerns have been excluded from the elite’s political and societal priorities. Indeed, the recent rise of right-wing demagogy in the West seems to eerily confirm Mouffe’s trepidations. Democracy is about compromise and negotiation between disparate opinions, “not zero-sum scorched earth attacks on anyone who does not follow the orthodoxy of one political group” (Shattuck 2016, 182). A commitment to democracy constitutes a never-ending task to ensure popular control and political equality (Charlesworth 2013, 280). Yet, since there is always the threat of “a tyranny of the majority,” liberal democratic institutions should never be taken for granted. As Mouffe (2000, 4) prescribes, this necessitates recognising the tension originating from the inner workings of democracy on the one hand, and liberalism on the other.

The Universal Violation of Human Rights

Through the Universal Declaration of Human Rights , states have committed themselves to respecting and safeguarding human rights. Nevertheless, states remain the greatest violators of human rights (Cedroni 2012, 257). However, the moralisation of human rights has led to a shift in attention away from the structural violence triggered by neoliberal capitalism towards more egregious acts of violence (Whyte 2012). In this way, human rights tend to prioritise the rights of individuals, which draws focus away from the rights claims of societies, communities and families (Donnelly 2006, 616). For example, political theorist Robert Meister (2011, 66) has observed the phenomenon of “the humanitarian melodrama,” which is the enjoyment of the moral feeling we get through witnessing the pain of bodies. For Meister, physical pain is always perceived as an egregious violation of human rights. However, the same is often not said of other types of violence such as abuses along the supply chain or mass incarceration (Whyte 2012). For example, Amnesty’s 1976 report that documented abuses in Argentina, which contributed to the organisation being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, did not comment on the growing poverty or the cutback of social welfare programs (as was the policy linchpin of the junta government) (Whyte 2012). Indeed, the international human rights regime is not a complete solution for social justice or human emancipation (Donnelly 2006, 616). In theory, this is unproblematic since different ethical, legal, and political practices need to come together for the functioning of an effective society. In practice, however, human rights today often exclude larger emancipatory visions and can even have morally perverse unintended consequences (Donnelly 2006, 616). For example, the way in which torture is construed as the ultimate human rights violation has the effect of limiting the ways we conceptualise violence and rights violations at a broader structural level (Kelly 2011, 328). In this way, the pathologising of torture has reduced the politics of human rights to a discussion about the need to limit gratuitous pain, rather than, for instance, the collective redistribution of wealth (Kelly 2011, 328).

This trend of sensationalising overt pain has inadvertently led to a pernicious form of torture (Kelly 2011, 328). Far from being the leftovers of our pre-civilised past, or a custom reserved for authoritarian regimes, political scientist Darius Rejali (2007) argues that there is a particular type of torture practiced by liberal democracies, namely what he has dubbed “clean tortures.” These are techniques that are designed to leave no traces. Such techniques include: Tasers; extremely hot or cold showers; refrigerated cells; sleep deprivation; and the infliction of noise (Rejali 2007, 553-7 for complete list). Rejali (2007, 39) links the development of clean torture techniques to the corresponding development of democratic monitoring, both domestic and international, that are intended to prevent torture. Rejali (2007, 390) argues that it is no coincidence that clean tortures began to spread rapidly in the 1970s, right about the same time when Amnesty was raising awareness of the significance of torture as a human rights issue. This increased sensitivity to signs of pain in our collective conscience has thus had the effect of perpetuating a type of torture available to democracies that is arguably more insidious given that it is harder to see.

In The Twilight of Human Rights legal scholar Eric Posner (2014, 112) argues, that even if human rights at the international level were enforceable, there is little reason to believe that individual human rights would promote the wellbeing of all people in a diverse collection of countries “where the interests, values, and needs of the populations cannot be captured in a simple list of rights.” Consider the rise of living standards and advancement of economic rights in China over the last 30 years. Hundreds of millions of people have been brought out of poverty. Posner (2014, 91) suggests that given the lack of democratic culture in China, and the extraordinary political turmoil that existed there until rather recently, there would be a significant risk to the management of the economy (and even societal peace) if China were to suddenly comply with civil and political rights. Liberal democracies run into the mirror image of this predicament. Democratic legislatures are often reluctant to formulate laws in compliance with the cosmopolitan norms of human rights. In the example of counter-terrorism measures in the US and UK, courts have repeatedly judged legislation intended to allow arbitrary detention unlawful. In any case, governments remain unwilling to respect well-established international human rights norms (Nash 2009, 99). As elected representatives, politicians are often unwilling to risk appearing soft on those who are perceived to threaten the state’s safety. This broad trend in contemporary politics shows that even in democratic societies there are contexts in which human rights are simply not popular (Nash 2009, 99). As we can see, it is thus impossible to separate the world into “good democratic states” that protect human rights and “bad authoritarian states” that are the biggest violators (Posner 2014, 121).

Conclusions

This essay has sought to navigate some tensions between human rights and democracy. It was argued that these tensions originate from the conflicting values upon which human rights and democracy were distinctly founded, the ways in which they are applied and the kinds of politics that they make room for. The careful juggling between the preservation of democratic institutions and the protection of human rights will thus remain shaky, even in the best of times. These tensions have risen out of the rift between liberal democracy’s conceptualisation of the universal Man and the national citizen, or rather, “the real beneficiary of rights” (Douzinas 2013, 56). Since rights form the basis upon which people are allocated into rulers, ruled, and excluded, it is hard to imagine a utopia in which human rights exist for those who do not belong to a demos (Douzinas 2013, 59).

This essay has also considered the broader shift in contemporary political discourse that interprets human rights as a moral story of ‘good versus evil.’ This is a false dichotomy, since states fall along a continuum of human rights compliance. Many states with authoritarian governments are responsive to the needs and interests of their populations and do protect the more significant human rights just as well as democratic governments are able to (Dryzek 2016, 362). This discussion is important because we ought to interrogate whether the human rights project epitomised by Amnesty International is the best solution to the banal lack of freedom, justice and equality experienced by people in all parts of the contemporary world.

Arendt, H 1966, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Harvest Book, San Diego.

Agamben, G 1998, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life , Stanford University Press, Stanford.

Cedroni, L 2012, ‘Rights in Progress. The Politics of Rights and the Democracy-Building Processes in Comparative Perspective,’ in C Corradetti (ed), Philosophical Dimensions of Human Rights: Some Contemporary Views , Springer, Dordrecht,  pp. 253-264.

Charlesworth, H 2013,  ‘Is there a Human Right to Democracy?’, in C Holder and D Reidy (eds), Human Rights: The Hard Questions , Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 271-284.

DeGooyer, S 2014, ‘Democracy, Give or Take?’, Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism and Development , vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 93-110.

Donnelly 2006, ‘Human Rights’, in JS Dryzek, B Honnig and A Phillips (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Political Theory , Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 601-620.

Douzinas, C 2013, ‘The Paradoxes of Human Rights’, Constellations , vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 51-67.

Dryzek, JS 2016, ‘Can There Be a Human Right to an Essentially Contested Concept? The Case of Democracy,’ The Journal of Politics , vol. 78, no. 2, pp. 357-367.

Haddad, E 2008, The Refugee in International Society: Between Sovereigns , Cambridge University Press, New York.

Ignatieff, M 2001, Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry , Princeton, Princeton University Press.

Ishay, M 2004, ‘What are Human Rights? Six Historical Controversies,’ Journal of Human Rights , vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 359-371.

Kelly, T 2011, ‘What We Talk About When We Talk About Torture’, Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism and Development , vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 327-343.

Landman, T 2013, Human Rights and Democracy: The Precarious Triumph of Ideals , Bloomsbury, London.

Meister, R 2011, After Evil , Columbia University Press, New York.

McLoughlin, D 2016, ‘Post-Marxism and the Politics of Human Rights: Lefort, Badiou, Agamben, Ranciére’, Law Critique , vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 303-321.

McNeilly, K 2016, ‘After the Critique of Rights: For a Radical Democratic Theory and Practice of Human Rights’, Law Critique , vol. 27, no. 3, pp.269-288

Mouffe, C 2000, The Democratic Paradox , Verso, London.

Moyn, S 2012, The Last Utopia , Belknap Press, Harvard.

Nash, K 2009, ‘Democratic Human Rights’, in R Morgan and BS Turner (eds), Interpreting Human Rights: Social Science Perspectives , Routledge, New York, pp. 87-103.

Posner, EA 2014, The Twilight of Human Rights Law , Oxford University Press, New York.

Reis Monteiro, A 2014, Ethics of Human Rights , Springer, Cham.

Rejali, D 2007, Torture and Democracy , Princeton University Press, Princeton.

Sen, A 2003, ‘Democracy and its Global Roots’, The New Republic , 6 October 2003, pp. 28-35.

Shaap, A 2013, ‘Human Rights and the Political Paradox’, Australian Humanities Review , no. 33, pp. 1-22.

Shattuck, J 2016, ‘Democracy and its Discontents’, The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs , vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 173-184.

Whyte, J 2012, ‘Intervene, I said’, Overland , no. 207 Winter, viewed 19 October 2016, <https://overland.org.au/previous-issues/issue-207/feature-jessica-whyte/>.

Written by: Lillian Carson Written at: The University of Melbourne Written for: Course: Human Rights; Degree: Master of International Relations Date written: November 2016

Further Reading on E-International Relations

  • Do Human Rights Protect or Threaten Security?
  • Human Rights and Security in Public Emergencies
  • IPE and Transnational Criminal Law: An Imperfect Yet Fruitful Relationship
  • Cultural Relativism in R.J. Vincent’s “Human Rights and International Relations”
  • Human Rights Law as a Control on the Exercise of Power in the UK
  • Gender Quotas: Towards an Improved Democracy

Please Consider Donating

Before you download your free e-book, please consider donating to support open access publishing.

E-IR is an independent non-profit publisher run by an all volunteer team. Your donations allow us to invest in new open access titles and pay our bandwidth bills to ensure we keep our existing titles free to view. Any amount, in any currency, is appreciated. Many thanks!

Donations are voluntary and not required to download the e-book - your link to download is below.

democracy and human rights essay pdf

Official websites use .gov

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

democracy and human rights essay pdf

Human Rights and Democracy

The protection of fundamental human rights was a foundation stone in the establishment of the United States over 200 years ago. Since then, a central goal of U.S. foreign policy has been the promotion of respect for human rights, as embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Supporting democracy not only promotes such fundamental American values as religious freedom and worker rights, but also helps create a more secure, stable, and prosperous global arena in which the United States can advance its national interests. In addition, democracy is the one national interest that helps to secure all the others. Democratically governed nations are more likely to secure the peace, deter aggression, expand open markets, promote economic development, protect American citizens, combat international terrorism and crime, uphold human and worker rights, avoid humanitarian crises and refugee flows, improve the global environment, and protect human health.

The United States uses a wide range of tools to advance a freedom agenda, including bilateral diplomacy, multilateral engagement, foreign assistance, reporting and public outreach, and economic sanctions. The Department of State works with democratic partners, international and regional organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and engaged citizens to support those seeking freedom.

Read more about what specific bureaus are doing to support this policy issue:

Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL): DRL leads U.S. efforts to promote democracy, to protect human rights and international religious freedom, and to advance labor rights globally. Read more about DRL

Top Stories

Colorful dots create a world map in background, text reads "2023 International Religious Freedom Reports, Office of International Religious Freedom, www.state.gov, U.S. Department of State."

2023 Report on International Religious Freedom

10th anniversary of isis’s genocide against yezidis, christians, and shia muslims, the burma military regime’s extension of state of emergency, under secretary zeya’s remarks at the atlantic council’s yezidi genocide and the struggle for recovery, u.s. department of state, the lessons of 1989: freedom and our future.

IMAGES

  1. (PDF) Social Work, Democracy and Human Rights

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

  2. Human Rights essay

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

  3. The Struggle for Voting Rights in the United States

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

  4. Democracy And Human Rights Argumentative And Persuasive Essay Example

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

  5. Democracy and Human Rights Essay

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

  6. Essay on Human Rights/Essay on human rights in english/Human rights essay/essay on Human rights Day

    democracy and human rights essay pdf

VIDEO

  1. #HumanRights101 Civil, Political, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Explained by Melchor Cayabyab

  2. Protecting human rights and preserving civil liberties: The role of courts in a democracy

  3. HUMAN RIGHTS ESSAY IN URDU l CSS l PMS

  4. Essay on Human Rights || Human rights essay in english || essay on Human rights day

  5. 10 Lines on Human Rights in English| Essay on Human Rights| Human Rights Essay|

  6. Human Rights Act 1998 and Its Relation to the European Convention

COMMENTS

  1. PDF Democracy and Human Rights

    ce with a call for rights. Democratic reforms and the restoration of human rights protections are seen as parts of. the same vision of change. Both democracy and human rights are advancing globally: there are more democratic and free elections taking place throughout the world, and human rights are obse.

  2. (PDF) Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures ...

    The empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of ...

  3. PDF Human Rights: A Brief Introduction

    The ethical basis of human rights has been defined using concepts such as human flourishing, dignity, duties to family and society, natural rights, individual freedom, and social justice against exploitation based on sex, class or caste. All of these moral arguments for human rights are part of ethical discourse.

  4. (PDF) Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships

    The empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of democracy; (2) the proliferation and effectiveness of human rights law; and (3) the causes and consequences of human rights across many of their categories and dimensions.

  5. PDF DEMOCRACY: ITS PRINCIPLES AND ACHIEVEMENT

    Mr. Janusz Symonides, Director of UNESCO's Division for Human Rights, Democracy and Peace, also contributed to the work of the Expert Group. In the months that followed, ten of these experts and the General Rapporteur presented their written contributions. These texts were considered in April 1997

  6. PDF Human Rights, Democracy, and Development

    In the past decade, human rights has joined democracy and development to. complete a triumvirate of factors that indicate a government's legitimacy, or lack thereof. Democracy, development, and human rights have important conceptual and practical affinities. Most obviously, international human rights norms require democratic government.

  7. Full article: Human rights and democracy in a global context

    International human rights and democracy were decoupled because democracy and human rights were not meant to be reunited, at first at least, in a newly created regional or global supranational state or in any kind of supranational political community. The question political theorists have been facing, therefore, is how to adapt their accounts ...

  8. PDF Justice and Democracy

    ustice and democracy. In section II, I distinguish between four types of disagreement about justice: thin versus deep, and reasonabl. versus unreasonable. I then focus on circumstances involving, respectively, thin and deep reasonable disagreement about justice, and consider the relationship between justice and democra.

  9. The Relationship Between Democracy and Human Rights

    The Relationship Between Democracy and Human Rights. By Kiersten E Davis. Download PDF. APG5092 - Research Essay Word limit: 5,000 Weight: 50% Due date: October 5 th , 2015 "The most effective way to protect human rights is through independent domestic legal institutions - and the best way to uphold those is via democracy.".

  10. PDF The Relationship Between Democracy and Human Rights

    The relationship between democracy and human rights. Journal of the International Academy for Case Studies, 27(S4), 1-2 human rights abuses. The United Nations ought to each heed the demand democratic reform as they arise and be concerned in property human rights primarily based democracy building processes Tully (2002).

  11. Human Rights and Democracy: Expanding or Contracting?

    institutional constraints of human rights; this essay emphasizes the negative influence of the conceptualization of human rights and democracy that is accepted in much of the Western World. This narrow Lockean conceptualiza-tion has led to a reduction in the scope and depth of the prevailing defini-tions of "human rights" and "democracy."

  12. PDF DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN NIGERIA

    The Nigerian democracy is stripped of its one of its beauties, (upholding human of rights), by the rulers and their cohorts. These people see themselves as above the law and have no regards for due process and rule of law. The immunity clause in the 1999 Nigerian constitution is an aberration of real democratic practice.

  13. PDF Human Rights, Democracy and The Rule of Law

    emocracy, human rights and the rule of law. The Forum is the newest subsidiary mechanism of the Human Rights Council and the Members of the Core Group on Resolution 28/14 "Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law" ar. etermined to ensure that it is a success. The panel was diverse and included youth representatives and leaders from ...

  14. PDF Human Rights

    Human rights are the bedrock principles which underpin all societies where there is rule of law and democracy. Since the end of World War II, the core importance of human rights has been universally acknowledged. Today, against a backdrop of multiple conflicts, humanitarian emergencies and severe violations of international

  15. About democracy and human rights

    About democracy and human rights. Democracy is a universally recognized ideal based on common values shared by people across the world, irrespective of cultural, political, social and economic differences. As recognized in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, democracy is based on the freely expressed will of the people to determine ...

  16. PDF EU Policy Discourse: Democracy, Governance, and Human Rights

    s Regulation (1 January 2007-31 December 2013) establishesa European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR) under which the Community shall provide assistance, within the framework of the Community's policy on development cooperation, and economic, financial and technical cooperation with third countries, cons.

  17. [PDF] Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships

    The empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of democracy; (2) the proliferation and effectiveness of human rights law; and (3) the causes and consequences of human rights across many of their categories and dimensions. This work has in many ways overcome ...

  18. PDF The Concepts and Fundamental Principles of Democracy

    Liberalism—Freedom, equality, and dignity of the individual. Liberal democracy recognizes the moral primacy of the individual and that all persons have certain fundamental rights. A central purpose of democracy is to protect these rights in the practical world of everyday life. Examples of these fundamental rights are.

  19. PDF Reflections on Democracy and Human Rights

    interpretations of human rights widely exist, more and more of our people have come to rely on and assert their rights. This can only be healthy for our democracy. However, it is also important that as people assert and claim their rights, they accept the responsibilities that come with having rights. The SouthAfrican Human Rights Commission is one

  20. PDF Developing Democracy: Concepts, Measures, and Empirical ...

    promotion and protection of human rights, and a greater guarantee for human security. Across these different areas of work, it appears that democracy features as both an end in ... of law and protection of human rights, and in certain cases, democracy. For example, on 1 May 2007, Hilary Benn, the UK Secretary of State for International ...

  21. PDF Democracy and Development

    advancing democracy through principled, consistent engagement in pursuit of the Organization's three pillars of peace and security, human rights, and development. 5 The UN must further develop its own internal policies and capacity to more effectively assist countries in transition toward democracy and support nascent democratic transitions.

  22. Democracy and Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy: Tools and

    This report focuses on U.S. foreign policy developments and policy tools that relate to democracy and human rights.2The report's grouping together of democracy and human rights reflects that Congress often approaches these issues in tandem. Democracy and human rights are distinct yet interrelated, overlapping concepts.

  23. Human Rights and Democracy: An Incompatible or Complementary Relationship?

    The purpose of this essay is to traverse the tensions between human rights and democracy. It is argued that these tensions originate from the incompatible values upon which human rights and democracy were distinctly founded, the ways in which they are applied and the types of politics that they make possible.

  24. Human Rights and Democracy

    Human Rights and Democracy. The protection of fundamental human rights was a foundation stone in the establishment of the United States over 200 years ago. Since then, a central goal of U.S. foreign policy has been the promotion of respect for human rights, as embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Supporting democracy not only ...

  25. Democracy and Human Rights: A Complex Relationship

    The nexus between human rights and democracy. The references to the existence of a link between democracy and human rights can be divided into two groups. Some texts consider respect for human rights to be a prerequisite for democracy, or the other way around. Other texts list that democracy and human rights are interdependent and mutually ...

  26. PDF Measuring Democracy and Human Rights in Southern Africa

    This paper consists of four sections. Section one provides an overview of the analytical framework of the paper. Sections two and three focus on human rights abuses in Namibia and South Africa respectively. Section 4 seeks to address the central question of this paper by means of comparative analysis.