An evaluation of the practicability of the right to development

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Date
2022Author
Mustapha, Owodunni Ola
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Mustapha, Owodunni Ola. (2022). An evaluation of the practicability of the right to development. Dearcadh: Graduate Journal of Gender, Globalisation and Rights, 3. doi:https://doi.org/10.13025/b9cq-r052
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Abstract
Human rights broadly speaking refer to norms, and
codes that seek to protect humans from political, legal, and social
abuses (Stanford, 2003). In more recent times, concerns for
issues involving global and social justice in the discourse of
rights ultimately transpired into a formulation of what we now
know as the right to development. Consequently, the motive
behind the right to development was to harmonize human rights
and core economic development concerns. The right to
development can be seen from two perspectives; as it pertains to
a citizen’s right to enjoy social and economic benefits where a
government is burdened with the responsibility of protecting that
right, and collectively as a group or society’s right to
development in relation to other societies. This article attempts
to address the critics of the right to development, and its
achievability. Our analysis highlights the need to create a nexus
between rights and development as well as measures through
which the contentious issues in relation to the right to
development can be addressed.