The Rights Revolution

Rights and Community in Modern America
ISBN13: 9780195090253ISBN10: 019509025X Hardback, 240 pages
Aug 1998,  In Stock

Price:

$45.00 (06)

Description

The most dramatic change in American society in the last forty years has been the explosive growth of personal rights, a veritable "rights revolution" that is perceived by both conservatives and liberals as a threat to traditional values and our sense of community. Is it possible that our pursuit of personal rights is driving our country toward moral collapse?
In The Rights Revolution, Samuel Walker answers this question with an emphatic no. The "rights revolution," says Walker, is the embodiment of the American ideals of morality and community. He argues that the critics of personal rights--from conservatives such as Robert Bork to liberals such as Michael Sandel--often forget the blatant injustices perpetrated against minorities such as women, homosexuals, African-Americans, and mentally handicapped citizens before the civil ights movement. They attack "identity politics" policies such as affirmative action, but fail to offer any reasonable solution to the dilemma of how to overcome exclusion in a society with such a powerful legacy of discrimination.
Communitarians, who offer the most comprehensive alternative to a rights-oriented society, rarely define what they mean by community. What happens when conflicts arise between different notions of community?
Walker concedes that the expansion of individual rights does present problems, but insists that the gains far outweigh the losses. And he reminds us that the absolute protection of our individual rights is our best defense against discrimination and injustice. The Rights Revolution is an impassioned call to honor the personal rights of all American citizens, and to embrace an enriched sense of democracy, tolerance, and community in our nation.

Product Details

240 pages; 5-1/2 x 8-1/4; ISBN13: 978-0-19-509025-3ISBN10: 0-19-509025-X

About the Author(s)

Samuel Walker is the Kiewit Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska. He is the author of several books, among them In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU (Oxford, 1990).

Add to Cart button
Add to Cart button

Consider these titles...

Taming the System

$80.00 Hardback Apr 1993

Five Miles Away, A World Apart

$21.95 Paperback Sep 2011
An eye-opening look at two Virginia high schools, illuminating the urban/suburban divide that has plagued our educational system from the 1970s to today

John F. Kennedy

$12.95 Hardback Dec 2010
Bestselling historian Robert Dallek offers a compact, insightful biography of John F. Kennedy on the 50th anniversary of his inauguration