أنشئ حسابًا أو سجّل الدخول للانضمام إلى مجتمعك المهني.
Human Rights implicates the basic needs of living as a Human beings. It this right is broken the organization named 'Human Rights 'shows some guides and principles to follow up.
The fundamental rights that humans have by the fact of being human
When a human is left, he needs right. But from which perspectives? Human rights has too many definitions depending on which politics is applied. From western point of view, human rights are those rights that they want to give to the rest of the world without loosing their mastering role.
Simple statement. " All the humans in the world are equal" but UN created this for their own country. Not for Muslims or others. Islam provides the best human rights and secured culture.
Fundamental rights of people as food, cloths, accommodation, education, medical and opinion.
Thanks for the invitation;
In fact I agree with all given answers, and I think they covered the issue perfectly.
Sir I thank you for the invitation. I think the standard of human rights vary from country to country.100 years ago people in south Asia did not have much Human Rights but if u were educated could easily travel to UK,South Africa, Australia and even China and Burma and the U.S and no visa was needed. Now we have human rights but the oppertunity to travel and work is restricted.
Human rights are moral principles or norms[1] that describe certain standards of human behaviour, and are regularly protected as legal rights in national and international law.[2] They are commonly understood as inalienable[3] fundamental rights "to which a person is inherently entitled simply because she or he is a human being,"[4] and which are "inherent in all human beings"[5] regardless of their nation, location, language, religion, ethnic origin or any other status.[3] They are applicable everywhere and at every time in the sense of being universal,[1] and they are egalitarian in the sense of being the same for everyone.[3] They require empathy and the rule of law[6] and impose an obligation on persons to respect the human rights of others.[1][3] They should not be taken away except as a result of due process based on specific circumstances,[3] and require freedom from unlawful imprisonment, torture, and execution.[7]
The doctrine of human rights has been highly influential within international law, global and regional institutions.[3] Actions by states and non-governmental organizations form a basis of public policy worldwide. The idea of human rights[8] suggests that "if the public discourse of peacetime global society can be said to have a common moral language, it is that of human rights." The strong claims made by the doctrine of human rights continue to provoke considerable skepticism and debates about the content, nature and justifications of human rights to this day. The precise meaning of the term right is controversial and is the subject of continued philosophical debate;[9] while there is consensus that human rights encompasses a wide variety of rights[5] such as the right to a fair trial, protection against enslavement, prohibition of genocide, free speech,[10] or a right to education, there is disagreement about which of these particular rights should be included within the general framework of human rights;[1] some thinkers suggest that human rights should be a minimum requirement to avoid the worst-case abuses, while others see it as a higher standard.[1]
Many of the basic ideas that animated the human rights movement developed in the aftermath of the Second World War and the atrocities of The Holocaust,[6] culminating in the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Paris by the United Nations General Assembly in1948. Ancient peoples did not have the same modern-day conception of universal human rights.[11] The true forerunner of human rights discourse was the concept of natural rights which appeared as part of the medieval natural law tradition that became prominent during the Enlightenment with such philosophers as John Locke, Francis Hutcheson, and Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui, and which featured prominently in the political discourse of the American Revolution and the French Revolution.[6] From this foundation, the modern human rights arguments emerged over the latter half of the twentieth century,[12] possibly as a reaction to slavery, torture, genocide, and war crimes,[6] as a realization of inherent human vulnerability and as being a precondition for the possibility of a just society