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What does it mean that a concept is 'contested'?
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All Flashcards in Topic 2.1
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2.1.111 cards
What does it mean that a concept is 'contested'?
Its meaning is disputed — different people understand and define it differently, so the same word is used to argue opposite things.
What are rights?
Basic claims or entitlements a person can hold, often simply as a human being.
What is justice?
The idea of fairness — in how people are treated and how resources or punishments are shared.
Distributive vs retributive justice?
Distributive = fair sharing of resources; retributive = fair punishment of wrongdoing.
What are the three generations of rights?
Civil-political (liberty), economic-social-cultural (equality), and collective/solidarity rights.
What is the liberty–equality tension?
Maximising freedom can grow inequality; maximising equality can limit some freedoms.
Universalism vs cultural relativism?
Universalism: rights apply to everyone everywhere; relativism: rights should reflect each culture.
What is the politicization of rights?
States using rights as a political weapon — condemning rivals while excusing themselves or allies.
Give a case where the meaning of justice is contested.
The death penalty — 'just' punishment to some, a rights abuse to others (US vs Europe).
Give a case where rights are contested across cultures.
LGBTQ+ rights — recognised in some countries, criminalised in others.
Does 'contested' mean rights have no shared meaning?
No — some rights (e.g. the right to life) are near-universal; the contest is mainly at the edges.
2.1.211 cards
What is universalism?
The idea that human rights apply to everyone, everywhere, simply because they are human — not based on nationality, culture or religion.
What is the UDHR?
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) — the founding global list of rights for all members of the human family.
What does 'inalienable' mean?
That rights cannot be taken away or given up — you keep them simply by being human.
Why is the UDHR a good example of universalism?
It set a single standard of rights for all humans, everywhere, whatever their country or culture — later turned into binding treaties.
What is the main strength of universalism?
No government can lawfully claim to be exempt, so it protects the weak against powerful states and refuses the 'tradition' excuse for abuse.
What is the main criticism of universalism?
That it reflects Western, individualist values imposed on others (a post-colonial critique) and can override local cultures.
What is the universalist reply to that criticism?
That a shared core (freedom from torture, slavery and killing) is genuinely universal, and 'culture' is often an excuse governments use to abuse people.
What is universalism's main rival?
Cultural relativism — the idea that rights should reflect each culture rather than one global standard.
What is a balanced judgement on universalism?
Rights are universal at the core (life, freedom from torture) but contested at the edges, and the idea is stronger than its uneven application.
Give an example of a near-universal right.
Freedom from torture, or the right to life — found in every regional human-rights charter.
How does universalism link to the UN?
The UN created the UDHR and the human-rights treaties that turned universalism into a global standard.
2.1.311 cards
What is cultural relativism?
The idea that rights and values should reflect each culture, not one universal standard — so one society should not judge another by its own rules.
How does cultural relativism differ from universalism?
Universalism says rights are the same for all humans; cultural relativism says rights should fit each culture, so they may differ from place to place.
What is cultural imperialism?
Forcing one culture's values on another — the harm cultural relativism warns against when 'universal' rights are imposed by powerful states.
Why is the 'Asian values' debate a good example?
Some Asian leaders argued their societies value community and order over individual rights; critics said it was often used to justify limiting freedoms.
When is cultural relativism reasonable?
For genuinely contested practices tied to religion, family or custom, where insisting one culture's answer is the only valid one can be arrogant.
When does cultural relativism become dangerous?
When 'our culture' is used to excuse torture, silencing dissent, or denying women and minorities basic rights — a shield for power.
Whose view is 'the culture' usually?
Often the government's or ruler's view, not necessarily what the people themselves want — a key criticism of relativism.
Should any rights never be relative?
Yes — a core such as freedom from torture, slavery and killing should hold everywhere, whatever the culture.
What is a balanced judgement on this debate?
Respect culture at the edges (customs, family, religion) but defend a universal core, judging each claim by whether it protects a people or a ruler.
How does cultural relativism link to post-colonialism?
It echoes the post-colonial critique that 'universal' rights can be a Western imposition on formerly colonised societies.
Does cultural relativism deny that rights exist?
No — it localises them, saying rights should reflect each culture rather than following one global list.
2.1.411 cards
What are the three generations of rights?
Civil-political (liberty), economic-social-cultural (equality), and collective/solidarity rights held by whole peoples.
What are first-generation rights?
Civil and political rights — the vote, free speech, a fair trial, freedom from torture. Liberty: 'freedom from' the state.
What are second-generation rights?
Economic, social and cultural rights — work, health, education, housing. Equality: 'freedom to' a decent life.
What are third-generation rights?
Collective rights held by peoples — development, a healthy environment, self-determination and peace. Solidarity.
What is the 'freedom from vs freedom to' contrast?
First-generation rights ask the state to leave you alone (freedom FROM); second-generation ask it to provide (freedom TO).
Why are third-generation rights the most contested?
They are held by groups not individuals and are hard to enforce, so critics ask who holds them and how they can be delivered.
What is 'right-inflation'?
The worry that adding ever more rights dilutes the idea — if everything is a right, enforcement becomes impossible.
Are economic-social rights 'real' rights?
The UN treats them as equal to civil-political rights, and liberty is hollow if you are starving; but critics note they cost money and are harder to enforce.
Why did third-generation rights emerge?
Poorer nations argued individual rights meant little without development, and climate change made a healthy environment a shared human concern.
Give an example of a third-generation right.
The right to development, to a healthy environment, or to self-determination.
Are the generations ranked or interdependent?
Interdependent — civil-political rights are easier to enforce, but each generation makes the others real, so they are not simply ranked.
2.1.511 cards
What is justice?
The idea of fairness — in how people are treated, how resources are shared, how wrongs are punished, and whether the process is fair.
What are the four types of justice?
Distributive (fair sharing), retributive (fair punishment), restorative (repairing harm) and procedural (a fair process).
What is distributive justice?
Fairness in how resources and wealth are shared — the justice of global poverty and inequality.
What is retributive justice?
Fairness in how wrongdoers are punished — the justice of the ICC and war-crimes trials.
What is restorative justice?
Repairing harm and rebuilding relationships rather than only punishing — e.g. truth and reconciliation commissions.
What is procedural justice?
Fairness in the process itself — fair rules, courts and trials, whatever the outcome.
What is the ICC?
The International Criminal Court — it tries individuals for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity; global retributive justice.
Why is the ICC contested?
Most of its cases have targeted African leaders while powerful states escape, so its justice looks selective.
Why is selective justice a problem?
Because justice applied unevenly is itself a form of injustice — if only the weak are held to account, fairness breaks down.
Can there be global justice in a world shaped by power?
It is real and growing (the ICC, universal rights) but applied unevenly — real against the weak, far weaker against the strong.
Why must you name the TYPE of justice in an essay?
Because 'justice' means different things — naming distributive, retributive, restorative or procedural sharpens the whole answer.
Topic 2.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Contested meanings: rights, justice, liberty, equality
Global Politics exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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