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List of Contributors page ix
Acknowledgements xv
introduction
1 The Perennial and Dynamic Relationship between Human Rights
and Natural Law 3
Mark D. Retter, Tom Angier, and Iain T. Benson
part i natural law and the origins of human rights
2 Natural Law and Human Rights: Continuities and Discontinuities 31
Cary J. Nederman and Ben Peterson
3 The Paradox of Shrinking Individuality: Natural Rights’ Development
and Relevance to Human Rights Today 45
Mónica García-Salmones
4 Synderesis, Conscientia, and Human Rights 61
Kevin L. Flannery, SJ
5 The Case against the Marriage of Natural Law and Natural Rights 74
Tracey Rowland
6 The Mythical Connection between Natural Law and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights 88
James Chappel
7 Natural Law and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 100
Paul Yowell
part ii natural law foundations of human rights obligations
8 Ontological and Epistemological Foundations of Human Rights 119
Tom Angier
9 The Teleological Foundations of Human Rights 133
Edward Feser
10 New Natural Law Foundations of Human Rights 146
Christopher Tollefsen
11 A Personalist Foundation for Natural Law and Human Rights 160
Josef Seifert
12 Acknowledged Dependence, Natural Right, and Human Rights: Augustinian
Humility, Charles Malik, and the Universal Declaration 175
Mary M. Keys and Melody Grubaugh
13 Eternal Law, Natural Law, Natural Rights: Freedom and Power in Aquinas 190
Jean Porter
part iii natural law and human rights within
religious traditions
14 Natural Law, Natural Theology, and Human Rights in the Jewish Tradition 205
David Novak
15 Natural Law and Human Rights in Catholic Christianity 218
Roland Minnerath
16 Natural Law and Natural Rights in the Early Protestant Tradition 233
John Witte, Jr
17 Human Rights or Moral Obligations? The Link with Natural Law
in Hinduism 247
Shashi Motilal and Jeremiah Dumai
part iv the human person, political community, and rule of law
18 Human Dignity and Natural Law 263
Patrick Lee and Robert P. George
19 Civic Friendship, Natural Law, and Natural Rights 276
John von Heyking
20 Common Goods, Group Rights, and Human Rights 291
Mark D. Retter
21 Natural Law, Human Rights, and the Separation of Powers 308
Julian Rivers
22 Human Goods and Human Rights Law: Two Modes of Derivation from
Natural Law 324
Grégoire Webber
23 Natural Law, Human Rights, and Jus Cogens 338
Stephen Hall
part v rival interpretations and interpretive principles
24 Moral Pluralism, Political Disagreement, and Human Rights 355
Catherine McCauliff
25 Human Rights Law and Adjudication: The Role of Determinatio 371
Francisco J. Urbina
26 Natural Law and Human Rights amid the Legal Ruins of Liberal Scepticism,
Values Language, and Global Resets 385
Iain T. Benson
27 Human Rights and the Modes of Judicial Responsibility 402
Peter D. Lauwers
28 The Right to Religious Freedom: Extension or Erosion? 418
Rafael Domingo
29 Natural Law, Rights of the Family, and International Human
Rights Instruments 432
Jane F. Adolphe
30 Natural Law and Socioeconomic Rights 448
Gary Chartier
31 Solidarity and Global Allocation of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Question of
Equality? 465
Thana C. de Campos-Rudinsky
part vi challenges and future prospects
32 Philosophical Challenges and Prospects for Natural Law Foundations of
Human Rights 485
Jonathan Crowe
Index 501

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알라딘제공
This Handbook provides an intellectually rigorous and accessible overview of the relationship between natural law and human rights. It fills a crucial gap in the literature with leading scholarship on the importance of natural law as a philosophical foundation for human rights and its significance for contemporary debates. The themes covered include: the role of natural law thought in the history of human rights; human rights scepticism; the different notions of 'subjective right'; the various foundations for human rights within natural law ethics; the relationship between natural law and human rights in religious traditions; the idea of human dignity; the relation between human rights, political community and law; human rights interpretation; and tensions between human rights law and natural law ethics. This Handbook is an ideal introduction to natural law perspectives on human rights, while also offering a concise summary of scholarly developments in the field.