David Kinley is the inaugural Chair of Human Rights Law at the University of Sydney, a founding member of Australian Lawyers for Human Rights, and an Expert Member of Doughty Street Chambers in London. He is the author of Necessary Evil: How to Fix Finance by Saving Human Rights and the coauthor of The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
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Description
Prologue
Introduction. Tea with a Dictator
Part I. Understanding Liberty
1. From "Liberty Dogs" to "Freedom Fries"
2. There Are No Robinson Crusoes
Part II. Negotiating Liberty
3. Health: Knowing Whats Good for You
4. Happiness: Of Miserable Grumps and Graceful Oysters
5. Wealth: Is Freedom for Sale?
6. Work: Bullshit or Beatific?
7. Security: Freedoms Awkward Sibling
8. Voice: Free to Offend or an Offensive Freedom?
9. Love: Whats the State Doing in Your Bedroom?
10. Death: The Ultimate Freedom?
Part III. Rehabilitating Liberty
11. Respect: Playing on a Team
12. Trust: Libertys Keystone
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Kinley has rediscovered liberty, which provides the essential nexus between freedom and responsibility. This book was desperately needed three years ago, but it is not too late. Everyone interested in how we go forward from here will find in it the balances essential to good decision making.
— Chris Sidoti, former Australian Human Rights Commissioner; UN Commission of Inquiry on Palestine and Israel; Special Advisory Council on Myanmar; International Service for Human Rights
Filled with the most readable vignettes of historical and contemporary significance, this book takes us on a much-needed global journey through the many and varied paradoxes of liberty to help us appreciate that liberty, in all its glory, encompasses both freedom and responsibility.
— Justine Nolan, Australian Human Rights Institute, University of New South Wales; author of Addressing Modern Slavery
Kinley makes a powerful case for restoring the contingent and reciprocal notion of liberty to its rightful place in democracy, as opposed to the absolutist concept of freedom that is currently in vogue. This wide-ranging discussion of the contemporary and historical balances that must be struck between individual and community rights is an excellent introduction to a much-needed debate.
— Hurst Hannum, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University; author of Rescuing Human Rights
Conceptual and informative, and enjoyable and intriguing. How did we get here, a place of a facile functioning of freedom, with people in democracies everywhere proclaiming their freedom over other citizens with whom they share a country? This book is prescient and observant.
— Patricia Viseur Sellers, Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court; London School of Economics
David Kinley has produced a superb and subtle interrogation of the tensions and paradoxes of individual agency in complex ecologies of agency exercised by individual bodies and bodies corporate.
— Larry Catá Backer, Pennsylvania State University; author of Hong Kong between "One Country" and "Two Systems"