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From the Page to Protest: How Reading Shapes Activists

  • literature

Reading is not just a way to acquire information butRead More

Why Literature Still Matters in the Fight for Human Rights

  • literature

Throughout history, literature has played a vital role in shapingRead More

How Cultural Heritage Shapes Views on Motherhood and Fertility

  • literature

Motherhood and fertility have been central to cultures around theRead More

Thе Rolе of Journalism in Dеfеnding Human Rights and Еxposing Injusticе

  • literature

Introduction Journalism has long bееn rеgardеd as thе fourth pillarRead More

How PayID Casinos in Australia are Safeguarding User Data and Upholding Human Rights

  • literature

The world of online gambling has witnessed a surge inRead More

Realization of human rights in the context of digitalization

  • literature
  • politics

Nowadays, human rights are one of the most important institutions of a democratic state governed by the rule of law, and the issue of ensuring human rights is becoming more and more relevant.

Human Rights as Idolatry

  • literature
  • society

Fifty years after its adoption, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights has become the sacred text of what Elie Wiesel called “the universal secular religion.

Human Rights and Human Trafficking

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  • society

Human trafficking is an issue of growing concern to the international community.

The Rights of the Child in the Family

  • literature
  • politics

The UN General Assembly proclaimed 1994 as the International Year of the Family.

In essence, the relationship between constitutional human and civil rights and freedoms and politics is meaningless to deny.
Politics is closely linked to human rights and often appeals to them in an attempt to ensure interaction between different social groups “by reconciling the desirable and the objectively achievable”.
By refracting economic interests through appropriate institutions and power structures, politics provides a focus for the realisation of constitutional rights.
Human rights, on the one hand, are used as a reference point (goal) for all political activity and, on the other hand, can be seen as an attribute (means) of political struggle.

Ultimately, volitional political decisions are given normative expression, contributing to the implementation of certain constitutional values. It can therefore be argued that human rights and freedoms are in the permanent “focus” of politics; they do not exist outside the political arena and depend on the ability of public authorities to find a balance between constitutional necessity and political expediency when making certain decisions affecting individual rights and freedoms.

Recent Posts

  • From the Page to Protest: How Reading Shapes Activists
  • Literature as a Weapon: Why Books Remain an Important Tool in the Fight for Human Rights
  • Why Literature Still Matters in the Fight for Human Rights
  • How Cultural Heritage Shapes Views on Motherhood and Fertility
  • How Literature Shapes Publiс Opinion on Human Rights

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Human rights, as a normative form of interaction between actors, reflect in a stripped down manner the multidimensionality of social and international relations. In the political-legal sense, turbulence is seen as the dynamics of transformation of the political and legal order at the national and/or international level

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