Reimagining Human Rights: Religion and the Common Good

Reimagining Human Rights: Religion and the Common Good

by William R. O'Neill
Reimagining Human Rights: Religion and the Common Good

Reimagining Human Rights: Religion and the Common Good

by William R. O'Neill

eBook

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Overview

In Reimagining Human Rights, William O’Neill presents an interpretation of human rights “from below,” showing how victims of atrocity can embrace the rhetoric of human rights to dismantle old narratives of power and advance new ones. Topics covered include race and mass incarceration, immigration and refugee policy, and ecological responsibility.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781647120368
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: 01/07/2021
Series: Moral Traditions series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 837 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

William O’Neill, SJ, is a professor emeritus of social ethics at the Jesuit School of Theology of Santa Clara University. He held the Jesuit Chair at Georgetown University from 2003-04 and has served on the editorial board of the Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics and the board of directors of Theological Studies. He is the author of numerous articles on moral theology and ethics and The Ethics of Our Climate: Hermeneutics and Ethical Theory (Georgetown University Press, 1994). He is currently serving as a member of the Mission and Identity Task Force for the Jesuit Refugee Service, stationed in Nairobi, Kenya.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

One: Interpreting Rights

I. A Genealogy of Difference

II. The Rhetoric of Rights

III. Conclusions

Two: Justifying Rights

I. The Interpretation of Ethics: Semantic Recognition

II. The Interpretation of Ethics: Epistemic Recognition

III. The Ethics of Interpretation: Respect

IV. Ethical Reciprocity

V. The Grammar of Rights

VI. Aristotelian Constructivism: Autonomy and Solidarity

V. Conclusions

Three: Rights and Religion

I. The Ethics of Public Discourse

II. Re-enchanting the Public Sphere

III. The Surplus of Religious Meaning: The Theological Virtues

IV. Conclusions: On Forgiveness after Mass Atrocity

Four: Applying Human Rights

I. Comparative Assessments

II. Realizations: Concrete Applications: Race and Mass Incarceration, Migration and Refugee Policy, Ecological Responsibility

Conclusion

Bibliography

About the Author

What People are Saying About This

Elias O. Opongo

It is when we recognize the stories of the victims that we begin to speak of human rights, responsibilities, and social transformation. . . . O’Neill’s reminder that human rights, religion, and the common good are intrinsically linked to the safeguarding of human dignity is key to deepening our common human experience.

Linda Hogan

With this book William O’Neill presents an original and compelling reimagining of human rights. He reverses the hermeneutical flow so as to rethink human rights as the grammar of dissent and in so doing opens an exciting and challenging new seam of enquiry about our obligations to each other in a pluralist and global context.

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