East Meets West : Human Rights and Democracy in East Asia /
Is liberal democracy a universal ideal? Proponents of "Asian values" argue that it is a distinctive product of the Western experience and that Western powers shouldn't try to push human rights and democracy onto Asian states. Liberal democrats in the West typically counter by question...
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| Format: | Electronic eBook |
| Language: | Inglés |
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Princeton, N.J. :
Princeton University Press,
2000.
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| Series: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Texto completo |
Table of Contents:
- Cover13;
- Contents13;
- Acknowledgments
- INTRODUCTION
- PART I THE EAST ASIAN CHALLENGE TO HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEMOCRACY: REFLECTIONS ON EAST-WEST DIALOGUES
- TOWARD A TRULY INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME
- 1. Trade-offs
- 1.1. Rights vs. Development: A Zero-Sum Game?
- 1.2. The Need for Specificity
- 2. An Asian Voice on Human Rights?
- 2.1. Human Rights: A Western Invention?
- 2.2. Increasing Commitment to Human Rights in East Asia: Strategic Considerations
- 2.2.1. On the Prospects of Exporting American Ideals to East Asia
- 2.2.2. Appealing to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Asia
- 2.2.3. Local Justifications for Human Rights
- 3. A Different Moral Standpoint?
- 3.1. Cultural Respect vs. Liberal Neutrality
- 3.2. Justifiable Constraints on Western-Style Rights
- 3.3. New 8220;Asian8221; Rights: Expanding the Set of Internationally Recognized Rights
- Summary
- DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS: ON THE IMPORTANCE OF LOCAL KNOWLEDGE
- 1. Trade-off Issues
- 1.1. On the Possibility of Decent Nondemocratic Regimes
- 1.2. The Costs of Democratization
- 2. Democratic Rights: Different Justifications
- 2.1. Limiting the Power of the State
- 2.2. Democracy as a Means for Nation-Building
- 2.3. Identifying the Agents of Democratization
- 2.4. Nation-Building and Social Consensus in Confucian Democracies
- 3. Democratic Rights: Different Constraints
- 3.1 Democracy vs. Civil Rights
- 3.2 Democracy vs. Social and Economic Rights
- 3.3 Democracy vs. Future Generations
- Summary
- PART II THE PROS AND CONS OF DEMOCRACY IN SINGAPORE: A FICTITIOUS DIALOGUE WITH LEE KUAN YEW
- IS LIBERAL DEMOCRACY SUITABLE FOR SINGAPORE?
- 1. Democracy Defined as Free and Fair Competitive Elections
- 2. Democracy Justified (Only) by Its Consequences
- 3. Democracy and Security
- 4. Democracy and Civil Liberties
- 5. Democracy and Prosperity
- Summary
- A COMMUNITARIAN CRITIQUE OF AUTHORITARIANISM: THE CASE OF SINGAPORE
- 1. Community and Democracy
- 2. Democracy and the Family
- 3. Democracy and the Nation
- 3.1. Singapore: A Patriotic Nation?
- 3.2. How Authoritarianism Undermines Patriotism
- 3.3. On the Need for Patriotism in Singapore
- Summary
- PART III DEMOCRACY WITH CHINESE CHARACTERISTICS
- A POLITICAL PROPOSAL FOR THE POST-COMMUNIST ERA
- 1. Constraining Democratic Populism
- 1.1. On the Need for Capable and Far-Sighted Rulers in Modern Societies
- 1.2. A Confucian Tradition of Respect for a Ruling Intellectual Elite
- 2. Alternative Proposals
- 2.1. Plural Voting Schemes
- 2.2. A Corporatist Assembly
- 2.3. A Parliament of Scholar-Officials
- 3. The Proposal
- 3.1. Selection Procedures
- 3.2. The Problem of Corruption
- 3.3. The Question of Universalizability
- 3.4. The Problem of Gridlock
- 3.5. Implementation of the Proposal
- Closing Scene
- Select Bibliography
- Index.


