Human Rights and Human Development
Author: A Sen
Date: 2000
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10 pages
(107 KB)
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Are the concepts of human rights and human development similar enough to be complementary? Are they diverse enough to enrich each other? Amartya Sen answers these questions, arguing that human rights and development are indeed mutually compatible. He shows that the promotion of human development and the fulfilment of human rights share a common motivation: enriching the lives and freedoms of ordinary people. The combination of the two perspectives gives us something that neither can provide alone.
Human rights focuses on individuals, and their claims to secure capabilities and freedoms. Capabilities are the range of things a person can do and be in leading a life. Human development focuses on the enhancement of the capabilities and freedoms that the members of a community enjoy. Both are concerned with economic, social and cultural rights and freedoms as much as with civil and political rights and freedoms. Based on examples from girls' education, to women's rights and the East Asian crisis, the different bodies of theory can be seen to complement each other.
Key perspectives offered by the human rights approach include:
Key perspectives offered by the human development approach include:
Therefore, for development to be achieved, the different focuses and analyses involved in a human rights and a human development approach must be pursued simultaneously. Further observations include:
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Source:
Sen, A., 2000, �Human Rights and Human Development�, Chapter One in the Human Development Report 2000, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), New York