Human Rights What Are Human Rights?
Human Rights What Are Human Rights?
Human Rights What Are Human Rights?
Human rights are also considered as legal and moral entitlements that evolved as a basis for constructing how state
power is used and particularly to limit its use against the rights of citizens.
Every human being is a person and that his nature is endowed with intelligence and full will. By virtue of this, he has the
rights and duties flowing directly from his very nature.
Economic, social and cultural rights – these rights become recognized when the citizens realized that the possession of
the first generation of liberty rights would be valueless without the enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights.
(e.g. right to work, right to social security, right to education, right to health, right to shelter)
Solidarity or collective rights – these rights are intended to benefit individuals, groups and peoples, and its realization
will need global cooperation based on international solidarity. (e.g right to peace, right of women, right of children, right
of self-determination)
Three divisions follow the French Revolution’s three slogans: Liberty, Equality and Fraternity
The claim of human dignity makes one worthy or deserving of respect. Human rights can be understood to specify
certain forms of social respect – goods, services, opportunities, and protections owed to each person as a matter of
rights – implied by this dignity. And the practice of human rights provides a powerful mechanism to realize in the social
world the underlying dignity of the person. Human rights thus are based on but not reducible or equivalent to human
dignity (or related notions like human needs, well-being, or flourishing). Human rights are one particular mechanism – a
particular set of practices – for realizing a certain class of conceptions of human dignity.
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