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Human Rights Law

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Vanderbilt University Law School

Economic rights

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Urban Despair And Nietzsche's "Eternal Return:" From The Municipal Rhetoric Of Economic Justice To The International Law Of Economic Rights, Barbara Stark Jan 1995

Urban Despair And Nietzsche's "Eternal Return:" From The Municipal Rhetoric Of Economic Justice To The International Law Of Economic Rights, Barbara Stark

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

Urban poverty has had a devastating impact, especially on African Americans in the United States, who have been ill-served by the rhetoric of opportunity. In this Article, the author argues that economic rights must be recognized as rights if the urban poor are even to dream of economic justice. The author uses the writings of German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche to explain how the past can be reclaimed. Urban poverty must be understood in an historical context. Limiting the inquiry to a domestic historical context not only blinds people to the relationship between domestic and international poverty, and domestic and international …


Human Rights In Africa: Observations On The Implications Of Economic Priority, Minasse Haile Jan 1986

Human Rights In Africa: Observations On The Implications Of Economic Priority, Minasse Haile

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

Serious internal obstacles also block adequate realization of civil and political rights in Africa. The colonial legacy, rising popular expectations for a better life, subversion from abroad and the absence of strong national cohesion will engender political instability in African political systems that give free rein to the exercise of civil and political rights. Moreover, even if one assumes a democratic political system would be viable politically, that system may succumb to demands for increased consumption rather than promote adequate investment in infrastructure. In either event, democratic political systems will tend to be unstable, with the result that economic development …