Human Rights
- Pages
- 3
- References
- 2
- Related Terms
- 1
Definition
Human Rights are universal rights people have simply by being human, not because a state grants them.
Background
After World War II, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international human rights law developed a global framework for civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights.
Position
They are a core concept for reading repression, occupation, protest, humanitarian crisis, and international law.
Distinctions
- Human rights differ from international humanitarian law because they apply beyond armed conflict.
- They are claimed as rights, not merely as charity or policy preferences.
Primary source-backed reference selected for this concept.
Sources
- What are human rights? - OHCHR Official
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights - OHCHR Official
Page Context
- Modernization and Authoritarianism in the Gulf States
Modernization and Authoritarianism in the Gulf States 1. Executive Summary Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar all talk about modernization, but their programs are not democratizat...
Quote: Modernization and Authoritarianism in the Gulf States middle-east
- History of civil repression and protest movements by the Iranian regime
History of civil oppression and protest movements by the Iranian regime 1. Executive Summary In Iran after the 1979 revolution, repression of citizens was not a temporary repres...
Quote: History of civil repression and protest movements by the Iranian regime geopolitics
Pages
- Modernization and Authoritarianism in the Gulf States
A comparison of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar through hydrocarbon rents, monarchy, migrant labor, human rights, and outward image strategy.
middle-east
- History of civil repression and protest movements by the Iranian regime
From the purges of the 1980s to "Women, Life, Freedom" in 2022 and beyond, we will organize the series of civil oppression and protest movements in post-revolution Iran.
geopolitics
- Reading the Israel-Palestine Conflict Through Civilian Perspectives
A durable report that separates Israeli citizens, Palestinian citizens, the diaspora, and neighboring societies, and reads memory, fear, loss, and daily life alongside security policy.
middle-east