Human Rights History
Human Rights History
Human Rights History
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Sixty years ago, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a bulwark against
oppression and discrimination. In the wake of a devastating world
war, which had witnessed some of the most barbarous crimes in
human history, the Universal Declaration marked the first time that
the rights and freedoms of individuals were set forth in such detail.
It also represented the first international recognition that human
rights and fundamental freedoms are applicable to every person,
everywhere. In this sense, the Universal Declaration was a
landmark achievement in world history. Today, it continues to affect
people's lives and inspire human rights activism and legislation all
over the world.
The first cluster of articles, 3 to 21, sets forth civil and political
rights to which everyone is entitled. The right to life, liberty and
personal security, recognized in Article 3, sets the base for all
following political rights and civil liberties, including freedom from
slavery, torture and arbitrary arrest, as well as the rights to a fair
trial, free speech and free movement and privacy.
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