"In his thought-provoking book, Chauffour tries to find a common denominator for an interdisciplinary development paradigm. He holds that freedom can bridge the gap between the development and human rights imperatives. Unlike foreign aid, embracing freedom doesn’t paper over or postpone difficult choices. Instead, Chauffour argues, it gives us a framework for communication across disciplines and can spark development that makes people better off and preserves their human rights. This book gives us a glimpse into how others think and the limitations of our own thinking. That’s how we’ll have a real conversation about people’s freedom to develop themselves and their societies as they see fit."
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Mark Plant, Deputy Director, IMF African Department, writing in
Finance & Development"Jean-Pierre Chauffour provides us with a very clear and exhaustive analysis of economic freedom as a human right and a tool for development. He demonstrates in particular the importance of democratic institutions in building the cultural and legal conditions for the achievement of such human rights. Doing so, he creates the conditions for a fair, clear, and lucid discussion on the main economic challenges of the next decades."
—Jacques AttaliFormer adviser, French president François Mitterrand
Former president, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
"What would Hayek have made of the right to development? This book suggests a powerful and provocative answer. Chauffour warns that many human rights specialists will find his book objectionable, which is a very good reason why they should read it."
—Philip AlstonProfessor of Law, New York University
"It takes a courageous writer to take on the compassionate hearts and high hopes of those who argue there is a ‘human right to development,’ now enshrined in many United Nations agreements. Chauffour is such a writer. He points out that this idea of human rights is an intellectual dead end and has had no practical benefit for the world’s poor. Worse, he argues, the ‘right to development’ violates individual human rights in a way that makes development less likely rather than more. Nobody who has ever paid attention to the many concepts of human rights can afford not to read this book, which itself displays both a compassionate heart and a tough and incisive mind. Chauffour is admirably determined to be brutally honest about which ideas really do further the cause of poverty reduction and which do not."
—William EasterlyProfessor of Economics, New York University
"The interface between human rights and development is an important part of the current discourse, surfacing in various agitations such as demands for trade sanctions against regimes that violate human rights, for the imposition of mandatory corporate social responsibility standards on multinationals, and for the inclusion of labor standards in trade treaties and institutions. Activism often overrides analysis, leading to harm rather than good. This splendid book by Jean-Pierre Chauffour, written by a distinguished economist who does not accept uncritically the popular demands in the name of human rights, marks, therefore, an important contribution that all policymakers should read."
—Jagdish BhagwatiProfessor of Economics and Law, Columbia University