The modern human rights project rests upon the belief that every human being possesses inherent dignity and is therefore entitled to equal moral consideration. This conviction has shaped constitutional democracies, international law, and global ethical discourse. Nevertheless, widespread experiences of social exclusion, discrimination, poverty, statelessness, and marginalization raise important philosophical questions concerning the adequacy of universal human rights frameworks. While universal human rights claim to protect all persons equally, large sections of humanity continue to experience systematic deprivation and exclusion from social, political and economic participation. This paper critically examines the concept of human dignity as the normative foundation of universal human rights. Drawing upon the works of Immanuel Kant, John Rawls, Hannah Arendt, Ronald Dworkin, and Amartya Sen, the study investigates whether abstract universalist theories can sufficiently address structural forms of injustice embedded within social institutions. The paper argues that although moral universalism remains indispensable for defending equality and human worth, purely abstract conceptions of dignity often fail to account for historically rooted forms of exclusion such as caste discrimination, racial oppression, gender inequality and statelessness. The study proposes a contextualized understanding of human dignity that preserves universal moral principles while acknowledging the social realities through which dignity is experienced or denied. Such an approach strengthens the philosophical legitimacy of human rights and enhances their practical relevance in pluralistic and unequal societies.
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Mr. Kunjulal Narzary
Mr. Bushrang Daimari
Technix International Journal for Engineering Research
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Sciences
Instituto Superior de Educação e Trabalho
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Narzary et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a28fe716f82f25be989bb5c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.56975/tijer.v13i6.162979
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