联合国与人权50周年:渐进式但不完整的革命

D. Forsythe
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引用次数: 5

摘要

在联合国成立的头五十年里,人权在世界事务中的地位发生了革命性的变化。人民与政府之间的关系发生了重大变化,这种变化是渐进的,而不是突然的。显然,无论是在法律理论还是在外交实践中,人格权都不再是国家专属的甚至是必要的国内管辖范围。基本的个人权利?人权?已得到国际承认,并成为各种国际行动的对象。联合国目前对广泛的人权问题具有共同管辖权,与各国和其他政府间组织共同促进和保护人权。此外,国际非政府组织在这一国际治理进程中也非常活跃。特别是自1991年以来,如果国家不保护人权,联合国本身可能会试图保护它们。然而,国际人权的概念是否真的在世界事务中占有一席之地?这个原则性的理念真的深深植根于全球社会吗?许多国家,就其悠久的历史而言,并没有长期认真关注人权。事实上,1991年以来“小型大屠杀”的存在提醒我们,法律理论与许多人类行为之间存在差距。仇恨和权力,甚至野蛮的古老传统,难道不会压倒相对较新的国际人权观念吗?在某些作家预测人类状况恶化的时候,我们怎么能说联合国发生了一场人权革命?回顾联合国五十周年的人权状况,我们可以开始回答一个重要的问题:国际上对人权的关注是否已经制度化,作为这一概念的反映
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The UN and Human Rights at Fifty: An Incremental but Incomplete Revolution
The first fifty years of the UN have manifested a revolutionary change concerning the place of human rights in world affairs. In an incremental rather than sudden way, there has been major change in the relationship between people and their governments. Clearly, in both legal theory and diplomatic practice, personal rights are no longer within the exclusive or even essential domestic jurisdiction of states. Fundamen tal personal rights?viz., human rights?have been internationally recog nized and made the object of varied international action. The UN now has concurrent jurisdiction over a broad range of human rights issues, sharing the promotion and protection of human rights with states and other inter governmental organizations. Further, international nongovernmental orga nizations have been highly active in this process of international gover nance. Particularly since 1991, if states do not protect human rights, the UN itself may try to protect them. Has the notion of international human rights, however, really taken hold in world affairs? Is this principled idea really deeply rooted in global society? Many states, insofar as they have a long history at all, do not have a long history of serious attention to human rights. Indeed, the existence of "mini-holocausts"2 since 1991 reminds us of the gap between legal theory and much human behavior. Might not old traditions of animosity and power, even savagery, actually overwhelm the relatively new notion of in ternational human rights? How can we say that there has been a revolu tion in human rights at the UN at the very time that certain writers project a deteriorating human condition?3 Taking stock of the status of human rights in the UN at fifty allows us to begin to answer an important question: Has international attention to human rights becon\e institutionalized, as a reflection of that notion's
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