Is The Era Of Universal Human Rights Coming To An End?
27th January 2018 · 2:00pm - 4:00pm
In person | Virtual event
CORIN REDGRAVE MEMORIAL LECTURE 2018
Is The Era Of Universal Human Rights Coming To An End?
Given by Conor Gearty, Professor of Human Rights Law at LSE
Conor Gearty’s introduction to the lecture:
The challenges that human rights face today have not come out of the blue. Rather they are the result of what from the human rights perspective are three systemic weaknesses in the architecture of the post-World War Two political settlement: the acceptance of national sovereignty; the focus of human rights on governmental rather than private power; and the relative weakness of social and economic rights as compared with the more traditional civil and political guarantees. The attacks of 11 September 2001 and the financial collapse from 2008 have exposed these weaknesses and the responses to both have threatened the system in a direct way. At a time when the United States has forsaken any role as defender of international human rights, even on a hypocritical basis, the future might appear bleak. But a reinvigorated Europe may yet operate as an antidote to pessimism.
Conor Gearty is Professor of Human Rights Law at LSE and a Barrister at Matrix Chambers as well as a Fellow of the British Academy, a member of the Royal Irish Academy and a Bencher of Middle Temple. He is a leading international expert on human rights and author of several books on the subject including his latest, ‘ON FANTASY ISLAND, Britain, Europe and Human Rights’.
The lecture is held in memory of Corin Redgrave who was an inspirational, passionate and steadfast campaigner for human rights.