The Individual Rights and the State
The Individual Rights and the State
Author(s): Constantin Cezar Tită, Violeta Dana TităSubject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence
Published by: Editura Fundaţiei România de Mâine
Keywords: individual rights; fundamental rights; state; terrorism; private life
Summary/Abstract: The concept of man’s individual rights appeared a long time ago as a means of the individual’s protection in relationship with the others. Living in a society, man interacts with other people, and these relations are regulated by certain rules. Once the state was formed, these rules become increasingly powerful while the concept of freedom is differently acknowledged. What actually lay at the basis of individual rights’ development was the concept of natural right which appeared in ancient Greece, and which can be traced throughout history like Ariadne’s thread, guiding different thought schools. Human’s fundamental rights are sanctioned only after being put down in the constitutions of different states, and once regional and international protection instruments are created. Nevertheless, in countries controlled by totalitarian regimes, human rights were infringed, the individual having to obey the collective community. These regimes having collapsed, individual rights underwent a change for the better, but they also came to a standstill due to 9/11 or Ground Zero. After this event, and in the context of the fight against terrorism, individual freedom was limited in the name of freedom itself, and individual rights are currently regressing as to the possibility of being exercised.
Journal: Journal of Law and Public Administration
- Issue Year: III/2017
- Issue No: 5
- Page Range: 47-51
- Page Count: 5
- Language: English