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Continuing the Conversation on Chinese Human Rights1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2012

Abstract

In recent years China has entered the international human rights debate, consistently making the case for cultural diversity in the formulation of human rights policy. Ames follows this argument of cultural relativism, emphasizing China's cultural differences and critiquing the concept of universal human rights, particularly as presented by Jack Donnelly in his book Universal Human Rights. Discussing the history of universal human rights and Confucian values, Ames asserts that a growing dialogue between China and the United States would benefit China in terms of political and individual rights and the United States in terms of a greater sense of civic virtue.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 1997

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References

2 The Consensus government document growing out of the Asian Regional Preparatory Meeting to the World Conference on Human Rights in Bangkok, Thailand, March 1993Google Scholar.

3 See, for example, Chunying, Xin, “A Brief History of the Modem Human Rights Discourse in China,” in Human Rights Dialogue 3 (December 1995), 45Google Scholar.

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10 Donnelly's discussion of the source of human rights is not clear. On the one hand, he wants to ground it in “being human”; on the other hand, he wants to say that “human nature is a social project as much as it is a given.” But it is a social project only in the most superficial sense. He assumes without argument that “human nature…is not arbitrary…for it is limited by, among other things, the psycho-biological bounds of human potential, the formative capabilities of social institutions, and morality” (emphasis added). See Donnelly, Jack, Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1989), 1619Google Scholar, esp. 18n6. When he locates the essential conditions of being human in the individual, and insists that these conditions are prior to and not conditional upon social actions, he is in fact making them transcendent in the strict sense that they determine human conduct while human conduct does not determine them.

11 Donnelly, Jack, “Human Rights and Asian Values,” in Bauer, Joanne R. and Bell, Daniel A., eds., The East Asian Challenge for Human Rights (forthcoming)Google Scholar. This definition is carried over here from all of Donnelly's published work. See Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice and, recently, more, International Human Rights (Boulder: Westview Press, 1993Google Scholar).

12 Joanne Bauer points out Donnelly's inconsistency in claiming that human rights are at once “uni-versal” and at the same time a response to the specific conditions in premodern Europe: the devetopmem of nation-states and the market system. See Human Rights Dialogue 3 (December 1995), 3Google Scholar. Donnelly further argues that such rights cannot be conditioned by the economic circumstances of developing nations, while at the same time asserting that they arise in response to the specific economic circumstances of Europe.

13 Donnelly, Universal Human Rights, 23. For the alternative definitions, see Hung-chao, Tai, “Human Rights in Taiwan: Convergence of Two Political Cultures?” in Hsiung, James C., ed., Human Rights in an Eastern Perspective (New York: Paragon House Publishers, 1985)Google Scholar; King Fairbank, John, The United States and China, 3rd ed. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1972)Google Scholar; Chung-sho, Lo, “Human Rights in the Chinese Tradition” UNESCO, in, Human Rights: Comments and Interpretations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1949)Google Scholar; and Bohua, Xie and Lihua, Niu, “Review and Comments on the Issue of Human Rights,” paper presented at JUST International Conference on “Rethinking Human Rights,” (Kuala Lumpur, 1994)Google Scholar.

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19 Even what we might take to be repressive regimes might have their own legitimate concerns. As Donald Emmerson observes: “Not all East Asian elites who worry about disorder are self-serving cynics looking for excuses to maintain the status quo…. [T]he greater incidence in Southeast Asia of spectacularly multicultural societies where the ever-present risk of ethnic and religious violence leads such officials as Lee and Mahathir to question the capacity of Western liberal democracy to ensure social discipline and order.” Japan Programs Occasional Papers 5 (New York: Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs, 1994), 12Google Scholar.

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26 This is Norani Othman's point when she argues: “Yet what is done in the name of Islam is not Islam itself, certainly not normative Islam at the level of central ideas and animating principles.”“Grounding Human Rights Arguments in Non-Western Cultural Terms: Shari'a and the Citizenship Rights of Women in a Modern Nation-State,” in Bauer and Bell, eds. The East Asian Challenge for Human RightsGoogle Scholar.

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29 Susan Sontag, in a recent New York Review of Books article, expresses sincere concern over that “decline of universalist moral and political standards” evident in the human rights debate. Her point is that her understanding of the Wei Jingsheng case represents the single issue that should be considered in talking with China about human rights. According to Sontag: There is an increasing reluctance to apply a single standard of political justice, of freedom, and of individual rights and of democracy. The usual justifications for this reluctance are that it is “colonialist” (the label used by people on the left) or “Eurocentric” (the label used both by multiculturalist academics and by businessmen, who talk admiringly of authoritarian “Confucian culture”) to expect or to want non-European peoples to have “our” values. My own view is that it is precisely the reluctance to apply these standards…that is colonialist and condescending” (42). The voices of dissidents can sometimes be important, and sometimes less so, but they are no alternative for cultural understandingGoogle Scholar.

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32 McKnight, Brian E., The Quality of Mercy (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1981)Google Scholar.

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37 Analects 2/3. This passage, properly understood, can be an argument for what “government by the people” would mean in a Chinese-style democracy. “Government”(zheng) is made the property of the people through “propriety”(li)—“proper conduct”(zheng) that makes order one's ownGoogle Scholar.

38 The quotation is in Donnelly, Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice, 20Google Scholar.

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48 For an elaboration of this “art of contextualization,” see Hall, and Ames, , Thinking Through Confucius, and Anticipating China: Thinking through the Narratives of Chinese and Western Culture (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995)Google Scholar.

49 Analects 1/12Google Scholar.

50 See de Bary, Ted, ed., “Confucian Harmony and Freedom of Thought: The Right to Think Versus Right Thinking,” forthcoming in a volume on Chinese attitudes toward human rights (New York: Columbia University Press)Google Scholar.

51 Ibid., ms. 2Google Scholar.

52 See Schoenhals, Michael, Doing Things with Words (Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, 1992)Google Scholar. There is an analogy here with the legal culture of liberal democracies, where controlling the terms of discourse is an enormous source of power.

53 An appreciation of the enormous power of rhetoric is rather natural in a tradition that never did subscribe to a philosophy/rhetoric dualismGoogle Scholar.

54 Munro, Donald J., “The Shape of Chinese Values in the Eye of an American Philosopher”Google Scholar in Terrill, R., ed., The China Difference (New York: Harper & Row, 1979), 40Google Scholar. See Randle Edwards, R., “Civil and Social Rights: Theory and Practice in Chinese Law Today,” in Edwards, R., Henkin, Louis, and Nathan, Andrew J., eds., Human Rights in Contemporary China (New York: Columbia University Press, 1986), 44Google Scholar. This position is widely held. Compare in the same volume Louis Henkin, “The Human Rights Idea in Contemporary China: A Comparative Perspective,” 39, and Andrew J. Nathan, “Sources of Chinese Rights Thinking,” 141–47. Kent, Ann, Between Freedom and Subsistence: China and Human Rights (Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 1993Google Scholar).

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