IS THERE A HUMAN RIGHT TO SUBSISTENCE GOODS? A DILEMMA FOR PRACTICE-BASED THEORISTS

Abstract

The much-discussed “claimability objection” holds that it is unjustified to believe that all individuals have a human right to subsistence because the bearers of the correlative duties are not sufficiently determined. This argument is based on the so-called “claimability-condition”: S has a right to P if and only if the duty-bearer is sufficiently determined. Practice-based theorists defend the human right to subsistence by arguing that if we take the existing human rights practice seriously, there is no indeterminacy about the allocation of duties. In this paper, I challenge this (apparently compelling) defense of the human right to subsistence with a dilemma. If the claimability condition is true, the practice-based defense fails to undermine the claimability objection because the duty-bearer is determined in some, but not all, cases. If practice-based theorists reject the claimability condition, they generate an account of human rights that is problematic from the practical perspective because it may contain duties that are unable to guide action.

Más información

Título según WOS: IS THERE A HUMAN RIGHT TO SUBSISTENCE GOODS? A DILEMMA FOR PRACTICE-BASED THEORISTS
Título según SCOPUS: Is there a human right to subsistence goods? A dilemma for practice-based theorists
Título de la Revista: Journal of Philosophical Research
Volumen: 46
Editorial: PHILOSOPHY DOCUMENTATION CENTER
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página final: 260
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.5840/jpr2021622162

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS