|
I How to Think about Rights in Early Modern Europe |
|
|
1 | (24) |
|
|
1 | (6) |
|
2 Tectonic Shifts and Tectonic Plates: Two Models for the Transformation of Culture |
|
|
7 | (2) |
|
3 A Revolution in Natural Law? From Objective to Subjective Right (and Back Again) |
|
|
9 | (6) |
|
4 Rights and Sovereignty: Beyond the State |
|
|
15 | (2) |
|
5 Inalienability vs. the Alienation of Rights |
|
|
17 | (1) |
|
6 Roman Law, the Lex Regia, and the Genealogy of Rights Regimes |
|
|
18 | (3) |
|
7 Writing Intellectual History in a Digital Age |
|
|
21 | (4) |
|
PART I Early Modern Rights Regimes |
|
|
25 | (76) |
|
II When Did Rights Become "Rights"? From the Wars of Religion to the Dawn of Enlightenment |
|
|
27 | (34) |
|
1 Monarchomachs and Tyrannicides: Natural Rights in the French Wars of Religion |
|
|
28 | (6) |
|
2 English Liberties and Natural Rights: Leveller Arguments in the English Civil War |
|
|
34 | (5) |
|
3 Abridging Natural Rights: Hobbes and the High Church Divines |
|
|
39 | (7) |
|
4 Entrust, but Verify? The Transfer Regime from Spinoza to Locke |
|
|
46 | (11) |
|
5 Into the Enlightenment: "Cato" and Hutcheson |
|
|
57 | (4) |
|
III From Liberalism to Liberty: Natural Rights in the French Enlightenment |
|
|
61 | (40) |
|
1 Sources for Natural Law Theory in France, 1700-1750 |
|
|
63 | (11) |
|
2 Physiocracy and the Dangerous Ignorance of Natural Rights |
|
|
74 | (11) |
|
3 Natural Rights Talk in the Late Enlightenment: The Philosophes Carry the Torch |
|
|
85 | (5) |
|
4 The (Meek) Conservative Reaction |
|
|
90 | (2) |
|
5 Resisting Despotism: National Rights and Constitutionalism |
|
|
92 | (9) |
|
PART II Social Naturalism in Early Modern France |
|
|
101 | (40) |
|
IV The Laws of Nature in Neo-Stoicism and Science |
|
|
107 | (11) |
|
1 The Many Receptions of Stoicism |
|
|
107 | (8) |
|
2 Laws of the Natural World: The New Science |
|
|
115 | (3) |
|
V Roman Law and Order: From Free-Market Ideology to Abolitionism |
|
|
118 | (23) |
|
2 The Jansenist Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism: Jean Domat, the Natural Order, and the Origins of Free-Market Ideology |
|
|
119 | (8) |
|
2 "All Men Are Originally Born Free": Slavery, Empathy, and the Extension of Human Rights |
|
|
127 | (12) |
|
|
139 | (2) |
|
PART III Rights and Revolutions |
|
|
141 | (84) |
|
VI Natural Constitutionalism and American Rights |
|
|
143 | (29) |
|
1 Boston, Locke, and Natural Rights (1715-64) |
|
|
147 | (10) |
|
2 Blackstone and English Common Law |
|
|
157 | (5) |
|
3 Natural Rights and Revolution |
|
|
162 | (4) |
|
4 Declaring Rights: From Natural Law Back to English Common Law |
|
|
166 | (6) |
|
VII From Nature to Nation: French Revolutionary Rights |
|
|
172 | (22) |
|
1 Whose Rights Are They, Anyway? Rights Talk in the Cahiers de Doleances |
|
|
175 | (4) |
|
2 Debating Rights at the National Assembly |
|
|
179 | (6) |
|
3 The Legal Spirit of the French Declaration of Rights |
|
|
185 | (3) |
|
4 The Revenge of National Rights |
|
|
188 | (3) |
|
|
191 | (3) |
|
VIII Conclusion: A Stand-in for the Universal Declaration: 1789-1948 |
|
|
194 | (31) |
|
1 The Catholic Church, Natural Law, and Human Rights |
|
|
196 | (5) |
|
2 From National Constitutions to an International Declaration |
|
|
201 | (19) |
|
3 The Archaeology of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights |
|
|
220 | (5) |
Acknowledgments |
|
225 | (4) |
Notes |
|
229 | (80) |
Selected Bibliography |
|
309 | (4) |
Index |
|
313 | |