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15 - The development of human rights thought from Magna Carta to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

from IV - The contemporary inheritance of Magna Carta

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

Sir Rabinder Singh
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham
Robin Griffith-Jones
Affiliation:
Temple Church and King's College London
Mark Hill, QC
Affiliation:
Cardiff University
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Summary

In the opening section of this chapter, I trace the development of human rights thought from the time of Magna Carta to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948. In the second part, I proceed to discuss the relationship between that development and religious thought. When I visited Runnymede some years ago, I bought a souvenir postcard which reminded me that it is regarded as the ‘birthplace of democracy’. This may be bad history but, as Professor Linda Colley has observed, there is a ‘cult and mode of memory’ which rests on bad history and which includes Magna Carta as the most important text in stories of liberty. On reflection I would suggest that there are three fundamental ideas which can be traced back, at least so far as the United Kingdom is concerned, to the drafting of what later became known as the Great Charter in June 1215. They are three related ideas but are in fact distinct.

First is the idea that even the king was subject to the law. This is what has evolved into the concept of the rule of law, a concept which was so elegantly and comprehensively analysed by the late Lord Bingham in his Sir David Williams lecture on that subject in 2006 and his later book with that title in 2010. At the heart of this concept is the idea that the government itself, and not only those who are governed by it, is subject to the law. As is well known, the symbolic importance of Magna Carta has always been greater than the precise provisions it actually contained. It has been argued about and reinterpreted ever since. As Professor Elizabeth Wicks has explained in her account of key moments in British constitutional history: ‘Even though it originated as merely an attempt to protect baronial interests, by establishing the principles inherent in the Rule of Law, the Magna Carta left a legacy for individuals of future ages to ensure that their governments acted according to the law and legal processes.’

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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