na INLIS000000000004313 20221029094647 0010-0520004313 221029 | | eng 0-521-68307-6 eng 341.480 341.480 DEM w Dembour, Marie-Benedicte Who Believes in Human Right? : Reflections on the European Convention / Marie-Benedicte Dembour New York : Cambriedge University Press, 2006 xxvii, 310 p. ; 23 cm. Many people believe passionately in human rights. Others - Bentham, Marx, cultural relativists and some feminists amongst them - dismiss the concept of human rights as practically and conceptually inadequate. This book reviews these classical critiques and shows how their insights are reflected in the case law of the European Court of Human Rights. At one level an original, accessible and insightful legal commentary on the European Convention, this book is also a groundbreaking work of theory which challenges human rights orthodoxy. Its novel identification of four human rights schools proposes that we alternatively conceive of these rights as given (natural school), agreed upon (deliberative school), fought for (protest school) and talked about (discourse school). Which of these concepts we adopt is determined by particular ways in which we believe, or do not believe, in human rights. 1. European Court Human Right 2. Convention for The Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedom 3. human Right - Europe 07337/MKRI-P/XII-2007 05736/MKRI-P/VIII-2008 07337/MKRI-P/XII-2007 05736/MKRI-P/VIII-2008 05736/MKRI-P/VIII-2008 07337/MKRI-P/XII-2007