When political liberalism meets a communalist worldview: John Rawls and African view of human rights

Fidèle Ingiyimbere
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Abstract

Since the publication of his A Theory of Justice (TJ), John Rawls has revolutionized political philosophy in many ways, including the understanding of human rights. His theory of rights in TJ is drawn from a comprehensive liberal doctrine and is limited to the domestic society. However, his account of human rights developed in his last major work, The Law of Peoples, claims to be politically free standing, following the model of his Political Liberalism. For Rawls, human rights are necessary conditions for social cooperation. They are meant to serve as one of the principles of foreign policy of the reasonable liberal peoples, in their relations with non-liberal societies. Rawls believes that his category of human rights cannot be rejected by non-liberal peoples as parochial or particular to the Western tradition, because they are not based on any comprehensive doctrine. On the other hand, however, many African scholars have dismissed the current international human rights regime on the account of being too liberal, and not corresponding to the African communalist worldview. It is in that regard that The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and subsequent African human rights instruments were adopted to dress a list of human rights that take into account African history, civilization, and values. Thus, in three main sections, this article examines whether the Rawlsian account and the African view of human rights can enrich each other, or whether they are completely opposed.
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当政治自由主义遇到社群主义世界观:约翰-罗尔斯与非洲人权观
自《正义论》(TJ)出版以来,约翰-罗尔斯在许多方面革新了政治哲学,包括对人权的理解。他在《正义论》中提出的权利理论源自全面的自由主义学说,并局限于国内社会。然而,他在最后一部重要著作《万民法》中对人权的论述却声称自己在政治上是独立的,遵循了他的政治自由主义模式。在罗尔斯看来,人权是社会合作的必要条件。在与非自由主义社会的关系中,人权是合理的自由主义民族外交政策的原则之一。罗尔斯认为,他的人权范畴不能被非自由主义民族视为狭隘的或西方传统特有的,因为它们不是建立在任何全面的学说之上。但另一方面,许多非洲学者却以过于自由、不符合非洲社群主义世界观为由,否定了当前的国际人权制度。因此,《非洲人权和人民权利宪章》及其后的非洲人权文书被采纳,以制定一份考虑到非洲历史、文明和价值观的人权清单。因此,本文将分三个主要部分,探讨罗尔斯的论述和非洲的人权观是否可以相互充实,还是完全对立。
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