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Journal article

The Second Great Transformation: Human Rights Leapfrogging in the Era of Globalization

Abstract

Whether globalization improves or undermines human rights is not a matter that can be observed in the short term. Globalization is the second "great transformation" spreading capitalism over the entire world. Many of its short-term effects will be negative. Nevertheless, its medium and long-term effects may well be positive, as it impels social changes that will result in greater moves to democracy, economic redistribution, the rule of law, and promotion of civil and political rights. Capitalism is a necessary, though hardly sufficient condition for democracy: democracy is the best political system to protect human rights. This does not mean that the non-Western world will follow the exact same path to protection of human rights that the Western world followed. No international law obliged the West to protect human rights during its own era of economic expansion. Thus, the West could practice slavery, expel surplus populations, and colonize other parts of the world. Genocide and ethnic cleaning were not prohibited.

Authors

Howard-Hassmann RE

Journal

Human Rights Quarterly, Vol. 27, No. 1, pp. 1–40

Publisher

Johns Hopkins University Press

Publication Date

January 1, 2005

DOI

10.1353/hrq.2005.0006

ISSN

0275-0392

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