Introduction To Human Rights and Citizenship Notes
Introduction To Human Rights and Citizenship Notes
Introduction To Human Rights and Citizenship Notes
In history --- Human beings have been described as civilized living beings capable of communicating with
the help of language and those who started the system of living in an organized society.
In political science --- Human beings have been defined as those social or political living beings who
developed the system through which a human society would function in an organized and lawful
manner.
Human beings are the most evolved and therefore the most complex among the living organisms on the
earth. We are known to be social beings and cannot live without society. Peaceful coexistence is the
basis of our life and thus it is important to have respect as well as protect the life of each other.
Meaning of “Rights”:
Rights are those claims and demands of an individual or group of individuals to good life which are
accepted by the community or society as essential for the common good and recognized by the State. In
other words rights are also those essential factors without which human life cannot sustain
Human Rights are defined as all those rights which are essential for the protection and maintenance of
dignity of individuals and create conditions in which every human being can develop his personality to
the fullest extent. Human rights become operative with the birth of an individual. These are moral claims
which are inalienable and inherent in all individuals by virtue of their humanity alone, irrespective of
caste, colour, creed, and place of birth, sex, cultural difference or any other consideration. Because of
their immense significance to human beings.
Human rights are also sometimes referred to as fundamental rights, basic rights, inherent rights,
natural rights and birth rights. They are not created by any legislature through legislation and are not
subject to amendment.
OR.
Human rights can broadly be defined as a number of basic rights that people from around the world
have agreed are essential. These include the right to life, the right to a fair trial, freedom from torture
and other cruel and inhuman treatment, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the rights to
health, education and an adequate standard of living.
These human rights are the same for all people everywhere – men and women, young and old, rich and
poor, regardless of our background, where we live, what we think or what we believe. This is what makes
human rights “universal”.
“Human rights are those minimal rights, which every individual must have against the State, or other
public authority, by virtue of his being a ‘member of human family’ irrespective of any consideration.”
------ (Dr. Justice Durga Das Basu)
“Rights derived from the inherent dignity of the human person.” ------ (UDHR).
Furthermore, respect for civil and political rights cannot be divorced from economic, social and cultural
rights. In other words, economic and social development cannot be achieved without the political
freedom to participate in that process, including the freedom to dissent. The nature and characteristics
of Human Rights can be further understood as under:
There are Numbers of Characteristics of Human Rights. Some of the important characteristic of Human
Rights include:
Human rights are essential and fundamental Because, In the absence of human rights, the society would
be in a deplorable state. There would be chaos all around. Human rights are a necessity for the
upliftment of people.
Not absolute:
Human rights are never absolute. Each right has its limitations which is imperative to public health, order
and morality. These rights are not unbridled.
Inalienable:
Human rights are inalienable in nature. “Inalienable” means unable to be taken away. When we say
human rights are inalienable we are saying that the rights are inherent in us and we cannot give it away
or renounce it.
Interdependent:
Human rights are interdependent on other rights.
Dynamic:
Human rights are ever changing, constantly dependent on the change in the political, economic, social or
environmental structures of the State. Human rights are not static. They can be modified according to
the prevailing situations and conditions.
Irrevocable:
The human rights are irrevocable; they cannot be taken away by anybody. No power or authority can
take away these basic rights from a person.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights articulates fundamental rights and freedoms for all. The
General Assembly of the United Nations adopted the Declaration on 10 December 1948. It declares that
human rights are universal, to be enjoyed by all people, no matter who they are or where they live. The
Universal Declaration includes civil and political rights, like the right to life, liberty, free speech and
privacy.
The main theme of it was protection against the arbitrary acts by the king. The 63 clauses of the Charter
guaranteed basic civic and legal rights to citizens, and protected the barons from unjust taxes.
Thomas Hobbes:
Thomas Hobbes was the first champion of the theory of ‘natural rights’. In his celebrated book,
“Leviathan”, he advocated that no individual could ever be deprived of the right to life. He asserted that
all human beings were equal, without any consideration.
John Locke:
English philosopher John Locke was part of the Early Enlightenment. Most of his writings were published
in the late 1600s. He was among the first to advocate the view that people have natural rights simply
because they are human beings, and that their natural rights should be protected by the government.
Locke’s most important piece of political philosophy is his Second Treatise of Civil Government. In his first
creative, Locke explicitly refuted the idea that kings ruled according to divine right (from God) and
argued that human beings had natural rights upon which the government could not infringe.
Paine:
Paine an American revolutionary thinker developed the doctrine of natural rights without linking it to the
social contract theory. He held that rights were natural, because they were bestowed upon man by God
himself. These rights existed, independent of the legal code of any country.
Furthermore, the Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776) declared a number of fundamental rights and
freedoms.
These were followed by development in philosophy of human rights by Thomas Paine, John Stuart Mill
and Hegal during the 18th and 19th centuries. The term human rights probably came into force
sometime between the publishing of “Rights of Man” by Paine and “The liberator “1831). by William
Lloyd Garrison.