The U.S. Economic Polity,Social Identity,and International Human Rights |
| |
Authors: | Joshua Curtis |
| |
Institution: | School of Law and Social Justice, University of Liverpool, Mulberry Court, Liverpool, UK |
| |
Abstract: | In this essay, I provide some complementary perspectives on certain themes that emerge in Judith Blau's (2016) timely and insightful article, “Human Rights: What the United States Might Learn from the Rest of the World and, Yes, from American Sociology.” In response, I offer some very brief reflections structured through two prisms by which we might think further about the United States and human rights. These perspectives pick up on the core issue of Blau's article, the U.S. rejection of socioeconomic rights, and how this issue in turn relates first to the “social identity” of the United States as a whole, and second to the role of the political economy in states' recognition of human rights. |
| |
Keywords: | human rights inequality law morality political economy social identity |
|
|