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The Politics of Moral Authority

Hopgood, Stephen

Authors

Stephen Hopgood



Abstract

What is at stake, politically, in abandoning claims that one's actions are legitimized by some form of transcendent authority? Analysing this question moves us beyond human rights debates about foundationalism, and asks whether the efficacy of claims made by human rights advocates is undermined by their inability, conceptually and politically, to make the case that human rights are moral truths rather than a more temporal and secular doctrine. Through an analysis of Amnesty International and its ambivalent grounding in Kantian notions of morality, and by considering competing religious and national claims to authority, I assess whether or not human rights activism suffers from an inescapable political ineptitude that must eventually see it decline in the face of more ardent and politically effective authority claims.

Citation

Hopgood, S. The Politics of Moral Authority. London

Working Paper Type Working Paper
Deposit Date Oct 24, 2007
Publicly Available Date Oct 24, 2007
Pages 1-36
Keywords Human rights, Amnesty International, Kant, moral authority, political authority

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