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Tuesday, 20 November 2012

HUMAN RIGHTS – Legal and Systemic Framework, Sasa Gajin, PhD

Legal literature usually defines human rights as a set of rights and freedoms that belong to all people. This definition is often accompanied by the words that refer to the inalienability of human rights and their natural origin. Hence, it is said that every human being is born free, with all the rights and freedoms that belong to other people. All people are endowed with the same corpus of human rights, regardless of the country they live in. Human rights do not depend on the will of the state or other authorities. Human beings do not get their rights and freedoms from a merciful government, nor are these rights and freedoms taken away by a capricious government. The individual remains the owner of all his/her rights, even if they are not recorded in the Constitution or other legal document.

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Praxis means action
Praxis means action
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Praxis means action