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The Indivisibility of Human Rights

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Abstract

This article defends a novel, normative conception of the indivisibility of human rights. Human rights are indivisible because normative commitment to one mutually entails normative commitment to another. The normative conception enables us to defend three important theoretical and practical corollaries. First, as a conceptual thesis normative indivisibility lets us see how human rights constitute a unified system not liable to the typical counter-examples to indivisibility as mutual indispensability. Second, as a dialectical thesis, normative indivisibility can support linkage arguments in defense of controversial human rights. And third, as a political thesis, normative indivisibility can show why the political thesis of indivisibility means that states lack discretion to ‘pick and choose’ which human rights to implement.

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Correspondence to Ariel Zylberman.

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Zylberman, A. The Indivisibility of Human Rights. Law and Philos 36, 389–418 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10982-017-9296-2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10982-017-9296-2

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