The Institute of Development Studies and Partner Organisations
Browse

Globalisation:

Download (234.99 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-06, 05:37 authored by Upendra Baxi
Summaries This article shows the intimate links between human?rights discourses today and globalisation. It highlights how rights discourses have contributed greatly to the radical critique of developmentalism, reconfiguring the notion of development by placing the human person, not the state, as the central subject and beneficiary. The article warns, however, of two contemporary processes of regression in rights discourses. The first is the emergent episteme that discredits thoughts that dare imagine alternatives to global capitalism and strays beyond the languages of economic rationalism. The second is the replacement of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights paradigm with a trade?related, market?friendly human rights (TRMF/HR) paradigm that promotes and protects the collective rights of global capital. In the latter the rights to entrepreneurship, innovation and economic progress are said to create the essential conditions for better realisation of social and human rights.

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Baxi, U. (2001) Globalisation: . IDS Bulletin 32(1): 94-102

Series

IDS Bulletin Vol. 32 Nos. 1

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

© 2001 Institue of Development Studies

Usage metrics

    Volume 32. Issue 1: Making Law Matter: Rules, Rights and Security in the Lives of the Poor

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC