Development As a Human Right
Legal, Political, and Economic Dimensions
A Nobel Book
Edited by Bård A. Andreassen
Edited by Stephen P. Marks
Foreword by Louise Arbour
Foreword
Louise Arbour
Introduction
Stephen P. Marks and Bård A. Andreassen
Part I: Conceptual Underpinnings
1. Human Rights and Development
Amartya Sen
2. The Human Right to Development
Arjun Sengupta
3. The Implications and Value Added of a Rights-Based Approach
Jakob Kirkemann Hansen and Hans-Otto Sano
Part II: Duties and Responsibilities
4. Obligations to Implement the Right to Development: Philosophical, Political, and Legal Rationales
Stephen P. Marks
5. The Right to Development and Its Corresponding Obligations
David Beetham
6. International Human Rights Obligations in Context: Structural Obstacles and the Demands of Global Justice
Margot E. Salomon
7. Development and the Human Rights Responsibilities of Non-State Actors
Bård A. Andreassen
Part III: National Realities and Challenges
8. Redesigning the State for "Right Development"
Yash Ghai
9. Making a Difference: Human Rights and Development -- Reflecting on the South African Experience
Sandra Liebenberg
10. Towards Implementing the Right to Development: A Framework for Indicators and Monitoring Methods
Rajeev Malhotra
Part IV: International Institutions and Global Processes
11. Human Rights-Based Development in the Age of Economic Globalization: Background and Prospects
Asbjørn Eide
12. Globalization and the Human Rights Approach to Development
Siddiq Osmani
13. Advocating the Right to Development Through Complaint Procedures Under Human Rights Treaties
Martin Scheinin
14. The Role of the International Financial Institutions in a Rights-Based Approach to the Process of Development
Sigrun I. Skogly
Part V: Conclusions
The Editors
Contributors
Index

