Affiliation:
1. 1 University of Sussex Department of International Relations United Kingdom Brighton
Abstract
Abstract
This article uses snapshots, rather than the ongoing flows of diffusion/contestation typically emphasized by constructivists, to explore the exercise of power through normative change. Its case is a high-profile Human Rights Council initiative: the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGP s). These UNGP s have successfully presented meanings as fixed while actually stretching those meanings’ boundaries. They reconceptualize what it means to “respect” and “protect” human rights. This is surprising given that the principles were framed as a conservative exercise at clarification, and under-noticed due to the legal rather than conceptual focus of the existing critical literature. To respect human rights, according to the UNGP s, agents need to take costly positive action. Furthermore, protect obligations come before respect. These are significant innovations. On the other hand, two missed opportunities of the UNGP s are their thin harm-based foundation for respect obligations, and their state centrism about who has duties to protect.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Safety Research,General Environmental Science,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
14 articles.
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1. Struggles for the Human;2024
2. Bibliography;Struggles for the Human;2023-12-12
3. Notes;Struggles for the Human;2023-12-12
4. Conclusion;Struggles for the Human;2023-12-12
5. For an Insurgent Humanism;Struggles for the Human;2023-12-12