The fact that the content of human rights has been broadly defined should not be taken to imply that the three generations of rights are equally accepted by everyone. Nor should broad acceptance of the idea of human rights suggest that their generations or their separate elements have been greeted with equal urgency. The ongoing debate about the nature and content of human rights reflects, after all, a struggle for power and for favoured conceptions of the “good society.” First-generation proponents, for example, are inclined to exclude second- and third-generation rights from their definition of human rights altogether or, at ...(100 of 15274 words)