Umanitatea ca subiect de drept
Humanity as subject of law
Author(s): Anca Ileana DușcăSubject(s): Civil Law
Published by: Uniunea Juriștilor din România
Keywords: humanity; common heritage of humanity; crime against humanity; international crimes; international humanitarian law;
Summary/Abstract: Confusing subject of study for a jurist, humanity is an evasive notion because it manifests itself in the individual but is, at the same time, external to it; it claims universality but the way each one looks at is as specific as each one. Myth or legal symbol, „humanity” is a term with variable content, both in the common and the legal language, because, at the same time, it represents the human essence, the goodness but also the race, the human species. The various meanings are indissolubly linked because they are intertwined, so that the „individual” humanity, the one that each individual carries himself, is inseparable from the „collective” humanity, the human community. This together construction results from legal instruments which reflect the ambivalence of the concept, the crime against humanity is, at the same time, a crime against the human essence and a crime against the human race, as its constituent elements demonstrate. Through time, humanity has born and fed contradictory legal discourses, so in international law it is more than a „concept slogan”, because its influence is tangible, but nonetheless, humanity has not simplified the international legal order but has made it even more complex.
Journal: Revista „Dreptul”
- Issue Year: 2020
- Issue No: 10
- Page Range: 37-59
- Page Count: 23
- Language: Romanian
- Content File-PDF