Counter-Elites Swimming Up-Stream: The Challenge of Pursuing a Political Rights Agenda where Economic Rights Trump

Author:

Grodsky Brian Keith1

Affiliation:

1. University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Abstract

Abstract The most recent spate of ‘democratic revolutions’, ushering in the fourth wave of democratization, seems to lend support to those advocating for the primacy of political and civil rights, over economic, cultural and social ones, in the human rights framework. In this article, I challenge that idea, arguing instead that the most recent regime changes, like so many that have preceded them, were, if anything, more about economic rights than political ones. I reassess not only the most recent ‘revolutions’, but also those that took place over the course of the 20th century, showing commonalities among the human rights goals of communists, anti-communists and contemporary pro-democracy leaders. By framing these various revolutionaries as human rights agents, and mass publics as their allies, this article is designed to engage readers in a debate about what, if any, sorts of rights truly hold primacy. The difference between today’s pro-democracy leaders and yesterday’s communist ones rests on the perceived international legitimacy of the democratic template. Yet all of these leaders, I argue, have essentially struggled for political change not as an end, but as a means to improved economic rights.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,General Social Sciences

Reference19 articles.

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3. Brian Looking for Solidarność in Central Asia : The Role of Human Rights Organizations in Political Change no;Grodsky;Slavic Review,2007

4. Christine and Johanna Keenan Human Rights Nongovernmental Organizations and the Problems of Transition Rights;Bell;Human Quarterly,2004

5. and S Whitefield The Politics and Economics of Democratic Commitment : Support for Democracy in Transition Societies British of no;Evans;Journal Political Science,1995

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