The Right to Preserve Culture

Although a supposed right to preserve culture is frequently invoked in normative debates, philosophical literature has produced scarcely any attempt to treat it as a particular claim that differs from other cultural rights and that, for that reason, is in need of a particular justification. Only by...

Author: Hoesch, Matthias
Document types:Article
Media types:Text
Publication date:2022
Date of publication on miami:01.08.2022
Modification date:01.08.2022
Edition statement:[Electronic ed.]
Source:Journal of Moral Philosophy (2022), 1-26
Subjects:Exzellenzcluster "Religion und Politik"; Gruppenrechte; Minderheitenrechte; Mehrheitenrechte; kulturelle Rechte; Immigration Cluster of Excellence "Religion and Politics"; cultural rights; immigration; group rights; majority rights; minority rights
DDC Subject:170: Ethik
172: Politische Ethik
Legal notice:Die Veröffentlichung des Manuskripts erfolgt mit freundlicher Genehmigung des Brill Verlags.
License:CC BY 4.0
Language:English
Funding:Förderer: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft / Projektnummer: 390726036
Format:PDF document
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-33029531842
Other Identifiers:DOI: 10.17879/33029532689
Permalink:https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-33029531842
Related records:
Digital documents:artikel_hoesch_2022.pdf

Although a supposed right to preserve culture is frequently invoked in normative debates, philosophical literature has produced scarcely any attempt to treat it as a particular claim that differs from other cultural rights and that, for that reason, is in need of a particular justification. Only by clarifying the content and the normative reasons underlying the supposed right, however, is it possible to evaluate the numerous political claims that have been based on it, ranging from the protection of minorities to restrictions on immigration into nation states. This article argues that the right to preserve culture should be seen as the right of a cultural group to enjoy the framework conditions and to enact supporting political measures that make it likely that its culture will continue to exist through an authentic and continuous path of development. Although some of the possible justifications of that supposed right fail, there is an approach that makes it at least plausible that the right to preserve culture is justified within certain limits.