Abstract
AN ATTEMPT to understand the role of dignity in human rights is worthwhile and
challenging. Popularly referred to as a “constitutional principle”, “moral precept”, or a “supreme
virtue”, dignity has allowed legal systems to adopt evolutionary and impactful practices
concerning the welfare of human beings. Defined also as the precursor and basis to the various
human rights defined and adopted, dignity continues to facilitate the integration of diverse
interests and stakeholders within the framework of human rights thought and practice. By
embracing several values and interests, dignity has reached out to protect-preserve-provide for
the worth of human beings as well those that cease to be or are not human beings. This
introduces a student of human rights to expressions like “interspecies dignity”, “intergenerational
dignity”, “trans human dignity”, and “posthumous dignity”, which are all opening the door for a
new consciousness in the field of human rights. The proliferating interests of the non-human
entities in the form of territorial sovereignty for animals, privacy of the deceased, rights for the
dead to be found in case of war/conflict etc., have been attached with an undeniable quality as
that is readily found in the understanding of dignity of human beings. In the wake of such
developments, there appears a strong sense of regeneration of dignity as a foundational principle,
leaving the earlier formulations of personhood, sentience, capacity, and worth into
disenchantment.