The Description for this book, Basic Rights: Subsistence, Affluence, and U.S. Foreign Policy, will be forthcoming.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
With unrelenting logic Shue recommends that American law be broadened to require the termination of aid not merely to those governments that engage in shocking and outrageous conduct but to those countries indifferent to the rights of their citizens to food, shelter, and health care. . . . Shue has written the classical statement affirming that the rich nations are required by justice and by international law to share their abundance with those millions who are chronically malnourished. -- Former Congressman Father Robert F. Drinan, Commonweal
This is one of the strongest arguments for an economic human right that I have found to date. -- Carl Wellman, Human Rights Quarterly
With unrelenting logic Shue recommends that American law be broadened to require the termination of aid not merely to those governments that engage in shocking and outrageous conduct but to those countries indifferent to the rights of their citizens to food, shelter, and health care. . . . Shue has written the classical statement affirming that the rich nations are required by justice and by international law to share their abundance with those millions who are chronically malnourished. -- "Former Congressman Father Robert F. Drinan, Commonweal
This is one of the strongest arguments for an economic human right that I have found to date. -- "Carl Wellman, Human Rights Quarterly
"With unrelenting logic Shue recommends that American law be broadened to require the termination of aid not merely to those governments that engage in shocking and outrageous conduct but to those countries indifferent to the rights of their citizens to food, shelter, and health care. . . . Shue has written the classical statement affirming that the rich nations are required by justice and by international law to share their abundance with those millions who are chronically malnourished."--Former Congressman Father Robert F. Drinan, Commonweal
"This is one of the strongest arguments for an economic human right that I have found to date."--Carl Wellman, Human Rights Quarterly
-With unrelenting logic Shue recommends that American law be broadened to require the termination of aid not merely to those governments that engage in shocking and outrageous conduct but to those countries indifferent to the rights of their citizens to food, shelter, and health care. . . . Shue has written the classical statement affirming that the rich nations are required by justice and by international law to share their abundance with those millions who are chronically malnourished.---Former Congressman Father Robert F. Drinan, Commonweal
-This is one of the strongest arguments for an economic human right that I have found to date.---Carl Wellman, Human Rights Quarterly
This book is about the moral minimum--about the lower limits on tolerable human conduct, individual and institutional. It concerns the least that every person can demand and the least that every person, every government, and every corporation must be made to do. In this respect the bit of theory presented here belongs to one of the bottom corners of the edifice of human values. About the great aspirations and exalted ideals, saintly restraint and heroic fortitude and awesome beauties that enrich life, nothing appears here. They are not denied but simply deferred for other occasions.
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