(e.g., Kymlicka’s "context of choice," Taylor’s "politics of recognition")
: Challenges the strict "dichotomy" by showing how collective protections serve individual interests.
: The book classifies these as human rights because they protect fundamental human interests—specifically the need for recognition and cultural stability.
: Suggests that group rights should be managed through democratic participation rather than top-down state intervention to preserve liberal values. Significance in Political Philosophy
(e.g., applying these theories to a specific modern cultural conflict)