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Human rights
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'''Human rights''' refers to the concept of
human beings as having universal
rights, or status, regardless of legal
jurisdiction or other localizing factors, such as
ethnicity and
nationality.
The existence, validity and the content of human rights continue to be the subject to debate in philosophy and political science. Legally, human rights are defined in
international law and covenants, and further, in the domestic laws of many states. However, there is still a great deal of variation in how these norms are defined and upheld.
Within particular states, "human rights" refer to safeguards for the individual against arbitrary use of power by the government (or by any private entity) regarding 1) the well being of individuals, 2) the freedom and autonomy of individuals, and 3) the representation of the human interest in government. These rights commonly include the
right to life, the right to an adequate
standard of living, freedom from
torture and other mistreatment,
freedom of religion and of
freedom of expression expression,
freedom of association,
freedom of assembly,
freedom of movement, the right to
self-determination, the right to
education, and the right to participation in cultural and political life. These norms are based on the legal and political traditions of
United Nations member states and are incorporated into
international human rights instruments (see below).
With the exception of the non-derogable human rights (the four most important are the right to life, the right to be free from slavery, the right to be free from torture and the right to be free from retroactive application of penal laws), the UN recognises that human rights can be limited or even pushed aside during times of national emergency.[http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/enable/comp210.htm] "the emergency must be actual, affect the whole population and the threat must be to the very existence of the nation. The declaration of emergency must also be a last resort and a temporary measure." Conduct in war is governed by
International Humanitarian Law.
Human Rights in international law
The
1948, the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights resolution was adopted virtually unanimously by the
United Nations General Assembly. While not legally binding, it urged member nations to promote a number of human, civil, economic and social rights, asserting these rights are part of the "foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world". The declaration limits the behavior of the state, which now has duties to the citizen (
corelative rights-duty duality). Efforts to create a legally binding form of the charter led to disagreements between various states over which rights were acceptable. Thus, two different covenents, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (opened for signature 1966, entered into force March 23, 1976) [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm] and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (opened for signature 1966, entered into force January 3, 1976) [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_cescr.htm] were created which bind those states that ratify them to protect the rights listed in the respective covenant. Together these three documents constitute the International Bill of Human Rights. There have also been a number of other conventions regarding particular rights, including the
*
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (entry into force: 1951) [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/p_genoci.htm]
*
UN Convention Against Torture Convention against Torture (entry into force: 1984) [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/h_cat39.htm]
*
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (entry into force: 1969) [http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/d_icerd.htm]
*
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (entry into force: 1981) [http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/frame.htm]
*
Convention on the Rights of the Child (entry into force: 1989) [http://www.unicef.org/crc/crc.htm]
*
Rome Statute Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (entry into force: 2002)
A modern interpretation of the original Declaration of Human Rights was made in the
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action[http://www.ohchr.org/english/law/vienna.htm], adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights in 1993. The degree of unanimity over these conventions, in terms of how many and which countries have ratified them vary, as does the degree to which they are respected by various states. The UN has set up a number of bodies to monitor and study human rights, under the leadership of the
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (HCHR).
There are also many regional agreements and organisations governing human rights including the
European Court of Human Rights, the only international court with jurisdiction to deal with cases brought by individuals (not states). the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights,
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
Types of human rights
Human rights are sometimes divided into
negative and positive rights, although other categorizations also exist. Negative human rights, which follow mainly from the Anglo-American legal tradition, denote actions that a government should not take. These are codified in the
United States Bill of Rights, the
English Bill of Rights and the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and include freedoms of
freedom of speech speech,
freedom of religion religion and
freedom of assembly assembly.
Positive human rights follow mainly from the
Jean-Jacques Rousseau Rousseauian Continental European legal tradition, denote rights that the state is obliged to protect and provide. Examples of such rights include: the rights to education, to a livelihood, to legal equality. Positive rights have been codified in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in many 20th-century
list of national constitutions constitutions.
A categorization offered by
Karel Vasak is the three generations of human rights: first-generation civil and political rights (right to life and political participation), second-generation economic, social and cultural rights (right to subsistence) and third-generation solidarity rights (right to peace, right to clean environment). Out of these generations, the third generation is the most debated and lacks both legal and political recognition.
Some theorists discredit these divisions by claiming that rights are interconnected. Arguably, for example, basic education is necessary for the right to political participation.
History of human rights
The best-known histories of the human rights movement tend to begin with ancient
religions and societies and show the evolution of concepts and institutions of human rights across civilizations. The roots of the notion of human rights are seen in
ancient philosophy concerning the role of the individual in the state, but principles of civil and political rights stem from liberal freedoms advocated by
John Stuart Mill in ''
On Liberty''. The concepts of economic, social and cultural rights can be traced back to
Hegel's ''
Elements of the Philosophy of Right''.
The
Achaemenid dynasty Persian Empire established unprecedented principles of human rights in the
6th century BC under the reign of
Cyrus the Great. After his conquest of
Babylon in
539 BC, the king issued the
Cyrus Cylinder, discovered in
1879 and recognized today as the first human rights document. The cylinder declared that citizens of the empire would be allowed to practice their religious beliefs freely. The cylinder also abolished slavery, so all the palaces of the kings of Persia were built by paid workers in an era where slaves typically did such work. These two reforms were reflected in the biblical books of
Books of Chronicles Chronicles and
Book of Ezra Ezra, which state that Cyrus released the followers of
Judaism from slavery and allowed them to migrate back to their land. The cylinder now lies in the
British Museum, and a replica is kept at the
United Nations headquarters.
Three centuries later, the
Mauryan Empire of
ancient India established unprecedented principles of civil rights in the
3rd century BC under the reign of
Ashoka the Great. After his brutal conquest of
Kalinga in circa
265 BC, he felt remorse for what he had done, and as a result, he adopted
Buddhism. From that point, Ashoka, who had been described as "the cruel Ashoka" eventually came to be known as "the pious Ashoka". During his reign, he pursued an official policy of
nonviolence (''
ahimsa''). Even the unnecessary slaughter or mutilation of animals was immediately abolished, such as
sport hunting and
branding. Ashoka also showed mercy to those imprisoned, allowing them outside one day each year, and offered the common citizen free education at
university universities. He treated his subjects as equals regardless of their religion, politics or
caste, and constructed free
hospitals for both humans and animals. Ashoka defined the main principles of nonviolence,
tolerance of all
sects and opinions,
obedience to parents,
respect for teachers and
priests, being
liberal towards friends, humane treatment of
servant (domestic) servants (slavery was non-existent in India at the time), and
generosity towards all. These reforms are described in the
Edicts of Ashoka.
The origin of modern positive rights in international law may be traced to the creation of the
International Labour Organization in
1919 as a Western response to the
socialism socialist ideology of the
Russian Revolution of 1917.
Philosophical basis of human rights
Numerous theoretical approaches have been advanced to explain how human rights become part of social expectations. The biological theory considers the comparative reproductive advantage of human social behavior based on empathy and altruism in the context of natural selection. Other theories hold that human rights codify moral behavior, which is a human, social product developed by a process of biological and social evolution (associated with
David Hume Hume) or as a sociological pattern of rule setting (as in the sociological theory of law and the work of
Max Weber Weber). This approach includes the notion that individuals in a society accept rules from legitimate authority in exchange for security and economic advantage (as in
John Rawls Rawls).
Natural law Natural law theories base human rights on the “natural� moral order based on religious precepts, the assumed common understandings of justice, or the belief that moral behavior is a set of objectively valid prescriptions. In legend, literature, religion and political thought, justice (and eventually the concept of human rights) became socially constructed over time into complex webs of social interaction striving toward a social order in which human beings are treated fairly. Religious societies tend to try to justify human rights through religious arguments. For example,
liberal movements within Islam have tried to use the
Qur'an to support human rights in a Muslim context.
Other theories are based on human agency, positing such constructs for agreement to rules on the utilitarian principles mediated by public reasoning. The social evolution model is based on human needs and struggle that incorporates an analysis of the norm-creating process. Values become norms through the constitutive process of authoritative decision-making. Such norms may take the form of law through a particular form of authoritative decision making of institutions associated with a legal system. It is the process of public reasoning through human rights norm-creating that progressively weeds out the culturally bound behaviors that are inconsistent with contemporary human rights. In this sense, culturally particular norms adapt to evolving human rights standards as defined in
list of national constitutions national constitutions and
international human rights instruments.
Ultimately, the term "human rights" is often itself an appeal to a transcendent principle, without basing it on existing legal concepts. The term "
humanism" refers to the developing doctrine of such
universality universally applicable values.
Some authors argue that nationalism and realism weaken human rights, while individualism and cosmopolitanism strengthen them. This is argued by Demetrius Klitou in his book "The Friends and Foes of Human Rights." Klitou also outlines the need for a "human identity" in order to empower the human rights movement.
In the
Political philosophy Western political tradition, human rights are held to be "inalienable" and to belong to all humans. They are necessary for freedom and the maintenance of a "reasonable" quality of life. The basis of this political tradition, perhaps best exemplified in the
United States Constitution (
1783) and the French
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (
1793) is the
equality of opportunity between individuals.
If a right is inalienable, that means it cannot be bestowed, granted, bartered, or sold away (e.g., one cannot sell oneself into
slavery). Rights may also be non-derogable (not limited in times of national emergency); these often include the right to life, the right to be prosecuted only according to the laws that are in existence at the time of the offense, the right to be free from slavery, and the right to be free from torture.
Human rights controversies
There are a number of controversies regarding human rights including:
#Are human rights political, moral or legal entities (or all three at the same time)?
#Is there or should there be a hierarchy of human rights?
#Do human rights impede on
sovereignty state sovereignty? What if the state itself has ratified international conventions?
#Should human rights be used as a context for economic or military intervention? (Often leads to a worsening of the human rights situation in the target country)
#Questions of
cultural relativism—e.g. "Political participation is not a part of African culture. Who are you to say that we should have political participation?" These arguments can also be made on religious basis: e.g., "In our religion marriages have always been arranged; why should we not continue this practice?" Some arguments claim that human rights policies are a form of
cultural imperialism in which powerful countries dictate which rights they consider most important to less powerful countries. The increasing number of third-world states that are party to international human rights treaties has made these arguments weaker, but they have not disappeared altogether. It is also worthy of note that many who criticize the actions and policies of the first-world or industrialized nations, such as the perceived interference of the United States in foreign affairs, often set up the need for human rights in ''opposition'' to imperialism, making the relationship between the two concepts highly complex.
#Who should hold the moral duty to uphold rights? For civil and political rights, many would answer 'the state'. But in practice, it is frequently one's fellow citizens and civil society who need to shoulder this responsibility. It is not quite so clear who should be responsible for promoting economic, social and cultural rights (do we have a global duty?). This debate mirrors debates between
communitarianism and
cosmopolitanism.
#Which rights should be defined as fundamental human rights? Should all human rights be considered equal? I.E. If women have the right to choose, shouldn't men also have the right to choose or at the very least a say in the out come of the women's decision?
#Are countries guilty of human rights violations when their governments substantially support foreign governments that do not adhere to the established principles of human rights (within their own countries or in other countries)? (For instance, the
Kirkpatrick Doctrine.)
See also
Similar topics
*
Children rights
*
Civil rights
*
Gay rights
*
Inalienable rights
*
Natural rights
*
Ombudsman
*
Prisoners' rights
*
Rights
*
Right of rebellion, first theorized by
John Locke
*
Women's rights
*
Bas de Gaay Fortman
General
*
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam (1990)
*
Democratic ideals
*
Femicide
*
Genocide
*
Human rights abuse
*
Human rights education
*
International human rights instruments
*
Social justice
*
Slavery
*
Trafficking in human beings
*
Three generations of human rights
*
Torture
Weblogs on Human Rights
[http://udhr.blogspot.com Human Rights Issues]
Human rights organizations
*
Amnesty International
*
Ansar Burney Trust - Working in Pakistan and the Middle East
*
Bahrain Centre for Human Rights
*
ARTICLE 19
*
Carter Center
*
Forum 18
*
Freedom House
*
Human Rights Campaign
*
Human Rights Watch
*
International Freedom of Expression Exchange
*
International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights
*
Memorial (society)
*
Montagnard Foundation
*
Network Against Prohibition
*
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
*
Peace Brigades International
*
Prisoners Overseas
*
Southern Poverty Law Center
{{main|List of human rights articles by country}}
=Africa
=
{{main|Human rights in Africa}}
*
South Africa:
Human rights in South Africa
*
Sudan:
Human rights in Sudan
*
Tunisia:
Human rights in Tunisia
*
Uganda:
Human rights in Uganda
*
Zimbabwe:
Human rights in Zimbabwe
**Note: Citizens of the African nations are provided supranational human rights protection by the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights.
=Americas
=
*
Brazil:
Human rights in Brazil
*
Canada:
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and
Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms
*
Cuba:
Human rights in Cuba
*
Mexico:
Human rights in Mexico
*
Peru:
APRODEH
*
United States USA:
Human rights in the United States
**Note: Citizens of the American nations enjoy varying degrees of supranational human rights protection from the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
=Asia
=
:''See
Human rights in East Asia and
Human rights in Central Asia''
*
Bangladesh:
Human rights in Bangladesh
*
Cambodia:
Human rights in Cambodia
*
Kazakhstan:
Human rights in Kazakhstan
*
India:
Human rights in India
*
Iran:
Human rights in Iran
*
Iraq:
Human rights in Iraq
*
Japan:
Human rights in Japan
*
Malaysia:
Human rights in Malaysia
*
Mongolia:
Human rights in Mongolia
*
Myanmar (Burma):
Human rights in Myanmar
*
North Korea:
Human rights in North Korea
*
Pakistan:
Human rights in Pakistan
*
People's Republic of China PRC:
Human rights in the People's Republic of China
*
Russia:
Human rights in Russia
*
South Korea:
Human rights in South Korea
*
Saudi Arabia:
Human rights in Saudi Arabia
*
Sri Lanka:
Human rights in Sri Lanka
*
Syria:
Human rights in Syria
*
Thailand:
Human rights in Thailand
*
Turkmenistan:
Human rights in Turkmenistan
*
Uzbekistan:
Human rights in Uzbekistan
*
Vietnam:
Human rights in Vietnam
=Europe
=
* ''See
Human rights in Europe''
** Note: The most powerful human rights organization is the
European Court of Human Rights, which is the only international court with jurisdiction to deal with cases brought by individuals (not states).
=Oceania
=
*
Australia:
Human rights in Australia
References
* Steiner, Henry J. & Alston, Philip. (1996). ''International Human Rights in Context: Law, Politics, Morals.'' Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 019825437X
* Donnelly, Jack. (2003). ''Universal Human Rights in Theory & Practice.'' 2nd ed. Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press.
* Forsythe, David P. (2000). ''Human Rights in International Relations.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
* Ignatieff, Michael. ''Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry.'' Princeton & Oxford: Princeton University Press.
* Shute, Stephen & Hurley, Susan (eds.). (1993). ''On Human Rights: The Oxford Amnesty Lectures.'' New York: BasicBooks.
* Sunga, Lyal S. (1992) Individual Responsibility in International Law for Serious Human Rights Violations, Nijhoff Publishers.
External links
Information
-
Human Rights Quarterly
-
United Nations- Universal Declaration of Human Rights
-
United Nations- Human Rights
-
Better World Links Biggest Link List on Human Rights
-
A Tamil human rights news portal
-
Rights Philosophy Forum
-
Country reports on human rights from the U.S. Department of State
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ngoCHR.org – Volunteer reporting on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights
-
University of Leicester, UK, list of sources and links.
-
Introduction to Human Rights & Humanitarian Law
-
Photojournalist's approach to human rights in Sudan
-
A Muslim approach to human rights
-
Mission and Justice – Human Rights, Justice and Peace news from the Asia Pacific region.
-
Chile - Human Rights during the Pinochet Regime The Chile Information Project
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Sri Lanka – Human Rights of the Tamil People
-
Children's Rights Alliance
-
Human rights development in Asia
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
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University of Minnesota Human Rights Library - Over 23,000 documents and 4,000 links
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University of Minnesota Human Rights Resource Center - Creating and distributing Human Rights Education (HRE) resources, training activists, professionals, and students & building advocacy networks
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International Freedom of Expression Exchange - Monitoring censorship around the world
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Human Rights News Headlines by NewsXS - Aggregated news and RSS feed
-
Survivor bashing - bias motivated hate crimes
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Human Rights Video Project - NVR's Program in Public Libraries
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Human Rights and Peace Store
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This is My Home: A Minnesota Human Rights Education Experience - Human rights curriculum and activities
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The Human Rights in Mime
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Diplomacy Monitor - Human Rights
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Comparative Analysis of Human Rights
Human rights organizations
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Amnesty International
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Ansar Burney Welfare Trust
-
Anti Slavery
-
Asian Human Rights Commission
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Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
-
Better World Links on Human Rights Organizations
-
Committee for Information and Initiative on Punjab
-
Dalit Human Rights (DHR)
-
ENSAAF: Fighting Impunity in India
-
FoodFirst Information and Action Network
-
Forum 18 News Service
-
Global Rights: Partners for Justice
-
Human Rights Watch
-
International Order of Human Rights - IOHR
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Justice For The World
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Olympic Watch: Human Rights in China and Beijing 2008
-
Ontario Human Rights Commission
-
The International Voice: A Youth Human Rights Newsmagazine
-
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center
-
The Magnus Hirschfeld Center for Human Rights
-
International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development (Rights & Democracy)
Category:Human rights *
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human rights
{{sisterlinkswp|Category:Human rights}}
'''''
:Category:Human rights instruments Human rights instruments''''' are legal documents of a
country or
society which grant or affirm the stated
human rights to their
citizens or
subjects.
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