|
Skip to comments |
NZCPR
Guest Forum
Opinion piece by
Bruce Logan
27 October 07
Is
The United Nations A Threat To National Sovereignty?
National
sovereignty remains a vexed issue across the world.
In the contemporary climate sympathetic to the
ambiguity which gives rise to such a contradictory notion as
"the international community" the very notion of
national sovereignty is ironic.
The term carries an overload of emotional power but no
coherent meaning. The implication, or even the intention, is
that the authority of the so-called international community
should transcend the authority of the nation-state to write
its own law. The formal context for the notion of
international community is of course the United Nations. But
the United Nations became possible only because sovereign
nations already existed.
It does not require too much imagination to view some
of the Conventions of the United Nations as a potential threat
to national sovereignty.
The problem lies with our perception of human rights.
The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) grew out of a
belief in human dignity and the consequent notion of freedom
intrinsic to the formation of the nation-state reinforced by
the discovery of the Nazi horrors during the
Nuremberg
trials.
We can go back, at least in
England
, as far as Magna Carta of 1215 and 1297 in which the king was
required to renounce certain rights, respect a variety of
legal processes and accept that his will could be bound by
law.
It is in this context that Simon de Montfort’s
‘Parliament’ of 1265 and his ‘Forty shilling freeholders
act tried to reduce the King's power by baronial voting.’ De
Montfort’s motivation was certainly not altruistic, and
while an exhaustive explanation of his achievements is not
possible here, the consequence of gaining votes for the barons
was to start a process towards what we now call the democratic
nation-state.
So
the nation-state has a very long history and the movement has
always been towards the freedom of citizens protected by the
rule of law. A just state had, and continues to have, a duty
to protect its citizens from the misuse of its own power.
The pilgrimage was long and uneven and it wasn't until
September 19, 1893 in
New Zealand
when women received the vote.
The
process then began slowly a very long time ago with the
separation of the power of the priest from the power of the
King.
In Roman times the power of life and death, certainly
with and after Tiberius, resided in the Emperor. Although the
reality was somewhat inconsistent his power was absolute.
Even the apostle Paul, on trial for his life before
Festus the Governor of Caesarea (58-60AD) appealed to Caesar
for justice.
Caesar was the law; there was no law above him.
Now,
particularly within the last 20years, the right and power to
shape the law within the context of the sovereign state is
being threatened.
How?
By contemporary and ideological defined interpretations
of human rights.
The emphasis has moved away from the notion of human
dignity that insists on the equality of the individual before
the law towards the rights of groups not to be discriminated
against.
Such an eventuality is critical because it is now the
state who must ultimately determine who is in and out of a
group.
An entirely new set of ideological identity doctrines
need to be established and reinforced by the state.
This
eventuality is reinforced by the international community which
is in danger of returning us to a time when the law is decided
by a body not elected by the people under the law.
And all this is done by the smoky perfume and mirrors
of human rights.
Nations that do not have a history of liberty grounded
in the notion of human dignity, along with Western liberals
who believe that the power of the state should be used to
reinforce their own views, have become dominant in the United
Nations.
They want a new world order in their own image which
must ultimately undermine the nation-state.
Perhaps
the most obvious evidence of this is the new kind of
motivation which brings about law change.
For most of Western history the impetus for change has
come from the grassroots; it came from people disenchanted
with state power.
Recently in
New Zealand
, particularly under the present administration, much law
change has been initiated by the state either to increase its
own power or to curry favour with a particular group.
Prostitution law reform, civil union’s legislation
and retrospective legislation we now know as Harry's Bill are
examples. This process has actually been reinforced by MMP in
spite of having more parties in Parliament.
Minority parties have been able to initiate and enforce
their own particular ideology on New Zealanders by political
manoeuvring around agreements with the government.
The most recent and obvious of these is what has become
known as the ‘smacking bill’.
To
make sense of this claim it is helpful to look at Isaiah
Berlin
's distinction between negative and positive liberty.
Simply put negative
liberty is about what an individual citizen can do in the
absence of restraint.
Positive liberty
is at least the possibility of acting to realise one's
purposes, or more recently and less accurately, one's
potential.
Negative liberty includes the right to freedom of
religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and movement
as well as equality before the law. It is the state's duty to
protect these kinds of freedoms (rights).
Positive
liberty on the other hand is designed and administered by the
state.
In a democracy this need not be too serious a problem
although in practice it frequently is because a wedge can be
driven between rights and duties.
The right to education, for example, tends to sit in no
man's land between positive and negative rights.
Is the education of children the duty of parents, the
right of the child or the duty of the state?
If one tends to emphasise parental duty then private
education will have a much higher status than if one
emphasises the duty of the state or even the rights of the
child.
Also if education is the duty of state, the state will
have to be the provider.
The more the state provides the more power it gets.
The
issue here is not that positive rights are a bad thing but
rather that they can present a danger to personal freedom the
more the state is able to invent and enforce them. To a
considerable extent this is what is happening between the
New Zealand
government and some conventions of the United Nations.
A subtle shift in authority and propaganda is taking
place.
For example, United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child has, in the domestic setting since it was ratified
in 1993, developed its own special kind of authority
(especially in the eyes of public intellectuals appointed to
implement it), and, as a consequence, trumped the
sensitivities and beliefs of ordinary New Zealand citizens.
We have seen this in the last couple of years with the
removal of Section 59 of the 1961 Crimes Act.
There were no hordes of parents or children
demonstrating on the streets.
The call for change came from public intellectuals and
noisy NGOs, well placed in relation to the levers of control
and media influence.
They won the day because the clear, common sense
distinction between parental discipline in the context of the
family, was usurped by an ideological confusion of parental
correction with violence.
And
Human Rights’ Commissions are partners in seduction.
In
New Zealand
the Human Rights Commission supported the removal of section
59 from the Crimes Act. The Equality and Human Rights
Commission in
Britain
has just released its annual ‘Sex and Power Report’.
Progress has not been made because there are fewer women than
men in Parliament, senior executives, judges and so on.
Sexist workplaces and stereotyping are to blame.
What the report fails to comprehend, or regard as
important, is that men and women make individual choices. Many
women because they are saner and more sensible than the
Commission tend to choose jobs that do not interfere too much
with their family life and personal relationships that go
along with that.
They are motivated by the intimacy of concern and not
ideology.
It
is not that UN Conventions are bad but rather the problem lies
with the nature of authority given to documents which
New Zealand
citizens have had no hand in shaping. The long-standing and
sometimes acrimonious debate around the so-called issue of
smacking seems to reinforce that interpretation.
So
instead of having hundreds of years of common-law and its
consequences shaping human rights we tend to get a situation
where human rights doctrine begins
to shape the law.
The so-called international community becomes a kind of
bureaucratic deity.
The rights battle is the new game between neighbours;
the government is the referee, coach and manager. Human rights
rule.
Human
rights are fine as far as they go.
The problem is that they do not and cannot go far
enough in the business of helping human beings form just and
satisfying relationships.
They run a very clear second, maybe even third.
They are certainly not a foundation for a good and
harmonious social order.
Human
rights focus on the individual and on the self at the expense
of duty. When they focus on the group injustice is likely.
That is particularly true of the increasing number of
new positive rights established and protected by the state.
They are nearly always divorced from the reality of
interpersonal and intergenerational duty.
Human rights are without flesh and bones, they are
bloodless.
They can never stir the heart to forgiveness or even to
admiration of the other.
Paul’s
little New Testament book Philemon is 1,000,000 miles away
from human rights even although it is about slavery and
freedom.
Paul's plea to Philemon (slave owner) for Onesimus
(slave) would see human rights as superfluous. Again there is
an irony.
Human rights, if they are to be effective in any way,
must first of all be posited on the foundation explored by
Paul in this little book.
Paul
loves Onesimus and he knows that he shares with him a common
human dignity given to both of them by God. Onesimus might
well be a slave but he shares a common dignity with his
‘owner’.
Paul
does not berate the slave owner but simply appeals to Philemon
for Onesimus on the basis of his loving friendship and their
common faith in God.
Or, if you prefer something more secular,in a common
and shared understanding of human dignity.
We
can reasonably accept that the appeal is successful and that
the slave ceases to be a slave and becomes a ‘brother’ and
friend.
The owner would have lost nothing and gained a great
deal.
We can also assume that other slaves owned by Philemon
will be treated similarly.
Without rebuke one slave owner learns a deeper way of
relating to others.
As
I have said at first human rights are fine as far as they go
but they run into a great deal of trouble, and so do we, when
we try to take them too far.
Human rights cannot be a foundation to social order; we
cannot have, in spite of the Prime Minister, a human rights
culture because a human rights culture would be ultimately
destructive.
Human rights must be based on an understanding of human
dignity which is not shaped by human rights.
Human rights are derivative they are not foundational.
Kofi
Annan has said "human rights are rights that any person
has as a human being".
Well yes, but that is a tautology.
A human being has rights because he or she is a human
being.
Because a human being has rights he or she is a human
being.
Of
course, human rights are based on the idea that every human
being has dignity but the question of who gives that dignity
is critical.
Dignity can only be given to us by either God or the
deified state.
There must be an authoritative source outside the
individual and above the state to bestow dignity; there must
be some Court of Appeal.
For
the apostle Paul that Court of Appeal was obvious.
Imagine if Paul had appealed to the Emperor to abolish
slavery would he have been successful?
The law had made slavery legal and commerce had made it
necessary. The balance between duty and rights is essential.
Without that balance the reality of human friendship,
dignity and freedom from slavery cannot be driven home to our
hearts.
When we shape the law only around human rights doctrine
we divorce the citizen of this responsibility and reinforce
his suspicion, even hatred, of the state.
And
that is precisely the problem of human rights as a foundation
for human relationship.
They cannot teach us the sheer attractiveness of
brotherhood or sisterhood even although they frequently usurp
that language.
Human rights are perhaps necessary in an imperfect
world but they must never be disconnected from duty, which in
spite of its initial unattractiveness is much closer to love,
harmony and friendship than the power of the state.
Skip to top |
Your
Comments:
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
Skip to top |
Send to
a friend:
|