Abstract:
Human rights, human development and human security form increasingly important, partly interconnected, partly competitive and misunderstood ethical and policy discourses. Each tries to humanize a pre-existing and unavoidable major discourse of everyday life, policy and politics; each has emerged within the United Nations world; each relies implicitly on a conceptualisation of human need; each has specific strengths. Yet mutual communication, understanding and co-operation are deficient, especially between human rights and the other discourses. The paper tries to identify respective strengths, weaknesses, and potential complementarity. It suggests that human security discourse may offer a working alliance between humanized discourses of rights, development and need.

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hdl.handle.net/1765/50677
ISS Staff Group 2: States, Societies and World Development
Forum for Development Studies
International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University (ISS)

Gasper, D. (2007). Human Rights, Human Needs, Human Development, Human Security - Relationships between four international human discourses. Forum for Development Studies, 2007-1, 9–43. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/50677