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    • Human Rights
    • What are human rights
    • How can human rights exist?
    • What characterizes human rights
    • Normative substantiation of human rights

    Every human being has dignity and worth. One way to recognize the fundamental worth of every human being is to recognize and respect their human rights.
    Human rights can be broadly defined as a series of fundamental rights that people around the world have recognized as important. They include the right to life, the right to a fair trial, freedom from torture and other cruel and inhuman treatment, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, as well as the rights to health, education and an adequate standard of living.

    • Human Rights
    • What are human rights
    • How can human rights exist?
    • What characterizes human rights
    • Normative substantiation of human rights
    • Voices of Change: Advocating for Social Rights in Asian Nations
    • The Legal Landscape of Online Betting in India: Risks and Rewards
    • Children’s Rights: Protecting the Most Vulnerable
    • Instagram Activists: Amplifying Messages and Mobilizing Supporters
    • 20th century

    Human rights philosophy addresses the existence, content, nature, universality, justifiability and legal status of human rights. The strong claims that are often made in favour of human rights (e.g. that they are universal, inalienable or exist independently of legal acts as justified moral norms) often provoke sceptical doubts and opposition to philosophical defences.

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