The (Latin) American Dream? Human Rights and the Construction of Inter-American Regional Organisation (1945-1948)
25 Journal of the History of International Law 560 (2024)
30 Pages Posted: 16 Feb 2024
Date Written: January 28, 2024
Abstract
The American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man is often cited as evidence of the longstanding centrality of human rights in Latin American approaches to international law. However, when the Declaration is brought into the history of inter-American regionalism, a more complex picture emerges. This article places the early codification efforts of regional human rights within the post-war construction of inter-American regional organisation. It argues that for Latin American and US elites, the priorities lay on institutional, collective security, and economic aspects. In this context, they instrumentally embraced the flexible language of human rights to advance broader regionalist visions. As a result, human rights gained ground, albeit as a contested idea. The article reveals that the post-war institutional settlement ultimately comprised a collective security apparatus, crucial for the United States, supplemented by the principle of non-intervention, vital to Latin American states, in which human rights were not central.
Keywords: History of international law, human rights, regionalism, Latin America, Organization of American States, international organizations, non-intervention, collective security
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