The Universal Declaration of Human of Human Rights Today: Can it still be relevant in the 21st Century?
This episode considers the relevance of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights today, in spite of the political compromises which surrounded its drafting, resulting in ambiguous norms which rely on domestic legal systems for meaning as well as effective implementation. As the previous episodes h…
The Universal Declaration: A Productive Ambiguity
This episode describes the drafting process of the Universal Declaration within the United Nations. It was fundamentally different from its eighteenth-century antecedents in that the process involved every UN member, myriad Non-Governmental Organisations and dozens of highly committed individuals. …
Twentieth Century Impulses towards a Universal Declaration
While the 19th century had seen some advances in rights for people (the abolition of the slave trade; protection of people in times of war), they were advances for specific groups of people rather than for all human beings. At the start of the 20th century there were several organisations from man…
Is Passion the Answer? The Age of Romanticism & the Abolition of Slavery
After the reaction against natural rights at the end of the 18th century, was a gentler touch, rather than a kick start, needed to massage human rights into life? This episode looks at the 19th century, which began as the Age of Romanticism, and which saw the abolition of the slave trade, but which…
Evolutionary or Revolutionary (II): What were the Reactions to the American & French Revolutions?
This episode considers the similarities and differences between the US and French revolutions and the resulting Declarations, and the reactions outside the United States and France to these. While some applauded the new focus on rights, others were appalled at the bloodshed, particularly that occu…
Revolutionary or Evolutionary? Were Revolutions Necessary to Produce Human Rights?
This podcast considers revolutions in religion, society and politics, and some of the people involved in them, and their effects on the notions of rights. The Reformation helped to detach notions of rights and the authority of the (Catholic) church from earlier notions of natural law. The Renaiss…
Introduction & Origin Myths: How Ancient are Human Rights?
This is the first podcast in a series to mark the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It considers whether human rights have an ancient pedigree in law, ethics, politics and religion. Do the Code of Hammurabi and the Cyrus Cylinder offer any clues to the origins? What was…