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A Magna Carta for All Humanity: Homing in on Human Rights Paperback – 26 May 2015

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Product details

  • Paperback: 322 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; New Ed edition (26 May 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0415423740
  • ISBN-13: 978-0415423748
  • Product Dimensions: 15.6 x 1.9 x 23.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 557,806 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

'If you read one book on rights this is it - a global citizen's guidebook to human rights, infused with the compassion and ethics which are the hallmark of Francesca Klug.' - Baroness Helena Kennedy QC

'Professor Francesca Klug, one of Britain’s most distinguished authorities, offers an intellectual and personal exploration of the Universal Declaration of 1948 and the very idea of human rights.' - Professor Philippe Sands, University College London

'This is an outstanding account of how, in a fast moving world, human rights have developed into ethical values for pluralist societies. It draws on history, politics and law with all the authority and insight of an insider who helped to shape recent stages of the journey in the UK.' Sir Keir Starmer QC

I do not know of a better introduction to thinking about the field, written with such a relevant purpose. The book is also very well written and eschews dry academic style in favour of the voice of passionate personal commitment but not at the loss of erudition or balance. There are not many good reads in our field; this is one. - Sir Nigel Rodney is Chair of the Human Rights Centre, University of Essex

About the Author

Francesca Klug is a Professorial Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Human Rights at the London School of Economics and has researched, written and lectured on human rights for 25 years. She is a former Commissioner on the Equality and Human Rights Commission and advised on the model for incorporating the European Convention on Human Rights reflected in the UK’s Human Rights Act.


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A really good collection of essays by Francesca Klug.

The first part of the book acts as an introduction to the international human rights framework, tracking the course of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and then the subsequent treaties. Klug argues that there is an intrinsic set of values, and a moral basis, that sit behind the rights. They do not exist just because they have been written in to law. She gives a careful textual analysis of the transcripts of the discussions that led to the establishment of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights under Eleanor Roosevelt's chairmanship.

The latter half of the book considers in detail the way in which the UK's Human Rights Act (HRA), which came in to force in 2000 and meant that British people could now ask British courts to consider their human rights alongside British statute and common law, had effect. It shows that the HRA was designed in order to respect parliamentary sovereignty (a particular aspect of the unwritten UK constitution is that the legislature is sovereign - unlike in the US - so a court cannot 'strike down' primary legislation). And then the book finishes by going through, blow by blow, the case against the Human Rights Act. Klug carefully dismantles the myth and the misunderstandings that have dogged the HRA since September 11 2001. This was the part I found the most useful, as it showed - with vigour and oodles of evidence - why many of the arguments made against the HRA are bogus, disproving beyond doubt the silly claims made that, for example, Strasbourg is constantly overturning UK laws; and the European Convention for Human Rights is simply a charter for terrorists and criminals.

In sum, this is great book for anyone studying human rights, anyone who wants the academic background to human rights in the UK but in a readable and not too lofty format, and anyone who needs some well-compiled ammunition to defend the Human Rights Act in public in the UK.
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