Abstract
AbstractThis chapter examines a specific category of rights—social participation rights—which include not only our rights to practise a faith in community with others, freedom of association, freedom of expression, and freedom of movement, but also an under-discussed set of rights: our interactional rights. The chapter shows that having access to ordinary, micro-moments of social connection with non-associates both underlies and partly constitutes our human right to participate in the life of the society. The chapter considers whether social participation rights are analogous to political participation rights and comments on specific barriers to social participation including segregation and loneliness. It concludes by addressing the objection that these rights are unclaimable.
Publisher
Oxford University PressOxford
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