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      Human rights without human supremacism

      Canadian Journal of Philosophy
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Early defenders of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights invoked species hierarchy: human beings are owed rights because of our discontinuity with and superiority to animals. Subsequent defenders avoided species supremacism, appealing instead to conditions of embodied subjectivity and corporeal vulnerability we share with animals. In the past decade, however, supremacism has returned in work of the new ‘dignitarians’ who argue that human rights are grounded in dignity, and that human dignity requires according humans a higher status than animals. Against the dignitarians, I argue that defending human rights on the backs of animals is philosophically suspect and politically self-defeating.

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          Human Rights and Capabilities

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            Dignity is a useless concept.

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              The Curious Eclipse of Prison Ethnography in the Age of Mass Incarceration

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Philosophy
                Can. J. of Philosophy
                Informa UK Limited
                0045-5091
                1911-0820
                December 2018
                January 01 2020
                December 2018
                : 48
                : 6
                : 763-792
                Article
                10.1080/00455091.2017.1386481
                5702b4fd-50bf-49f6-9a75-644898f8d058
                © 2018

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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