Human Development Report 2000
Human rights and human development
Support for human rights has always been integral
to the mission of the United Nations,
embodied in both the UN Charter and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. But
throughout the cold war serious discussion of
the concept as it relates to development was
too often distorted by political rhetoric. Civil
and political rights on the one hand and economic
and social rights on the other were
regarded not as two sides of the same coin but
as competing visions for the world’s future.
We have now moved beyond that confrontational
discussion to a wider recognition
that both sets of rights are inextricably linked.
As Mary Robinson, United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, often
reminds us, the goal is to achieve all human
rights—civil, cultural, economic, political and
social—for all people. Access to basic education,
health care, shelter and employment is as
critical to human freedom as political and civil
rights are. That is why the time is right for a
report aimed at drawing out the complex relationship
between human development and
human rights.
Occasional Papers: Topical
background research for the HDR 2000
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Foreign
Policy e-Alert on Human Rights and the War on Terror:
The unfolding scandal over the alleged abuse of prisoners in Iraq and
Afghanistan has raised uncomfortable questions about human rights
during war. While some argue that the threat posed by al Qaeda and
Iraqi insurgents sometimes necessitates distasteful tactics, others
warn that the United States risks losing the moral high ground in the
struggle against terror. In this special edition of the FP e-Alert,
analysts explore the ethical gray zones that emerge in times of war,
and question whether the international community’s commitment to human
rights is more rhetoric than reality.
THINK
AGAIN: HUMAN RIGHTS (March/April 2004) By Richard Falk
Those who argue that respect for human rights must be sacrificed to win
the war on global terrorism have got it all wrong. This struggle is far
more a political and moral conflict than it is a military one.
Adherence to human rights, even for those accused or suspected of
terrorist involvement, would signal Washington’s respect for life and
human dignity. To act otherwise discloses a kind of secular
fundamentalism that blurs the nature of the conflict.
Read this article online
ABUSING
MILITARY ETHICS (July/August 2002) By Joel H. Rosenthal
The mistreatment of POWs by coalition soldiers in Iraq raises tough
questions about military ethics during asymmetric warfare. FP
reviewed the Journal of Military Ethics, an emerging forum for
policymakers, military officers, and philosophers to explore how much
force is acceptable in the pursuit of peace. "The simplistic rhetoric
of the early days in the war on terrorism," the reviewer concludes,
"will certainly give way to complex cases." ......
Read
this article online
DO HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES MAKE THINGS WORSE? (January/February 2003) By
David Weissbrodt
Since the end of World War II, scores of nations have agreed to abide
by a growing array of human rights agreements. But are those countries
complying? In many instances, nations appear to ratify treaties only
because of external political pressure and the need to appease
prospective foreign investors. By offering countries rewards for
positions rather than actual policies, ratification of treaties can
serve to offset pressure for real change.
Read
this article online
HUMAN
RIGHTS DEBATE: THE NEW DOUBLE STANDARD (Winter 1996-97) By Aryeh Neier
During the Cold War, the United States was ready to denounce human
rights abuses by governments aligned with the Soviet Union; today, it
is similarly ready to do so against pariah states or the governments of
countries that are not considered politically or economically
important. That is the new double standard; it is a different double
standard from the one that prevailed during the Cold War, but it is
just as pernicious in damaging efforts to promote human rights
internationally.
Read
this article online
HUMAN RIGHTS DEBATE: JETTISON THE POLICY (Winter 1994-95) By Alan Tonelson
Does any government-centered human rights policy make sense in the
post-Cold War era? All the evidence indicates that such policies,
however morally compelling, are obsolete—swamped, ironically, by the
very forces that only yesterday inspired such optimism in a new age of
human rights progress. Globalization has turned Washington’s human
rights efforts into Cold War relics, as antiquated as fallout
shelters—and, in their own way, as falsely comforting.
Read
this article online
Analysis and Resources on the World Wide Web
TIMELINE
OF DETAINEE ABUSE ALLEGATIONS AND RESPONSES Human Rights Watch
Concerns about mistreatment of detainees in Iraq, Afghanistan, and in
other undisclosed detention facilities set up after September 11, 2001,
have been raised many times by the media, human rights organizations,
and the U.S. Congress. Human Rights Watch offers a detailed chronology
of these reports, dating back to December 2002.
Read
this timeline online
PRIVATE CONTRACTORS WHO TORTURE FindLaw
Human rights attorney Joanne Mariner explores the options for
prosecuting civilian contractors accused of abusing Iraqi prisoners.
Although there is a slim possibility of local prosecutions in Iraq, she
concludes that the most likely option is trial in the U.S. federal
courts under the War Crimes Act of 1996 or the Military
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000. But, she adds, the odds of
successful prosecutions are not very promising.
Read
this column online
WHO'S AFRAID OF ABU GHRAIB? American Enterprise Institute/Weekly
Standard
"[Is] our situation in Iraq really in any way compromised by Abu
Ghraib?" asks the American Enterprise Institute's Reuel Marc Gerecht in
this article that originally appeared in the Weekly Standard.
"The Abu Ghraib affair hasn't hurt at all the cause of democracy in the
greater Middle East, so long as the United States doesn't believe it
has," he argues. "For most Muslims, the affair really doesn't matter
politically."
Read
this article online
COULD TORTURE EVER BE JUSTIFIED? CNN
Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz and Ken Roth, the
executive director of Human Rights Watch, debate the question of
whether torture can be justified in extreme circumstances. "[We] should
never under any circumstances allow low-level people to administer
torture," argues Dershowitz. "If torture is going to be administered as
a last resort in [a] ticking-bomb case, to save enormous numbers of
lives, it ought to be done openly, with accountability, with approval
by the president of the United States or by a Supreme Court justice."
Read
this debate online
PROTECTING
HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE CONTEXT OF THE WAR ON TERROR
Carter Center [PDF document]
This report, published by the Carter Center, warns that human rights
and pro-democracy activists worldwide have come under increased attack
by governments claiming they are acting to prevent the emergence of
terrorist threats. Complicating matters, the report argues, is the fact
that the United States, long considered to be a great champion of human
rights issues on the global stage, has compromised its ability to prod
offending governments toward better human rights practices.
Read
this report online
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Read more on human rights and terrorism from FP's archives.
Find
the complete list of FP articles on Human
Rights and Terrorism
in our comprehensive online Subject
Index. Some articles may require registration or
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