Abstract

The chapter's concern is meta‐theoretical and pertains to the nature of human rights theory. Interestingly, most human rights theorists do not spend much time stating what their theory is a theory of, and hence what kind of theory it should be. The chapter argues in favour of taking the legal dimension of human rights more seriously and, more specifically, for a legal theory of human rights. Making human rights law the object of human rights theory has two advantages: one substantive and the other methodological. First of all, it makes for a deeper understanding of the nature of human rights as a practice, and hence of many questions in human rights theory. A second benefit lies in the resources of legal theorizing, and in particular the latter's experience in explaining and evaluating normative practises. A related contribution of the proposed legal human rights theory is that it can bridge the gap that has grown within existing human rights theories between human rights practice and human rights standards, and so‐doing reconcile so‐called “political” and “ethical” human rights theories out of their sterile opposition.

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