Human Right / Kim Ami


1.     Summary

Human rights are moral principles or norms that describe certain standards of human behavior and are regularly protected by natural and legal rights in local autonomy and international law. These rights cannot be transferred unilaterally and people have rights simply because they are human beings. It means that all human beings, regardless of age, ethnicity, location, language, religion, ethnicity, or other status, are equal. The ancient people did not have modern universal human rights concepts, but the concept of human rights was established after World War I and II, and through the Declaration of Human Rights and the Treaty of Human Rights, the obligation to guarantee human rights was imposed on citizens. At the international level, the protection of human rights was carried out through an international organization called the United Nations, and through the African Union, the Organization of the Americas, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Human rights are classified as civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. If citizens do not have civil rights and political rights, they cannot claim economic, social and cultural rights. Also, realism and national loyalty have devastating effects on human rights movements because they deny human innate qualities.

2.     Interesting point

The interesting part is that the United Nations acknowledges that human rights can be restricted or even overpowered during national emergencies. This was new because the United Nations valued peace and thought it was very strict in guaranteeing human rights. However, I think there is a concern about how to judge the level of a national emergency.

3.     Discuission

Like IS, human rights violations are being made through terrorism. Why do these things still happen?

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