09 Chapter 2
09 Chapter 2
09 Chapter 2
1 Z&XY II
11
HUMAN RIGHTS:
A HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Every individual has dignity.1 The principles of human rights
human being will be able to fully develop and use human qualities such as
intelligence, talent and conscience and satisfy his or her spiritual and other
needs.
that apply to you also apply to others. The denial of human rights and
also creates conditions of social and political unrest, sawing the seeds of
such conditions as are essential for the fullest realization of the innate
19
characteristics which nature has bestowed him/her with as a human being.
It implies that there are inherent and inalienable rights which are due to an
individual by virtue of his/her being a human being and that they are
factor.
human rights. Only these claims which are essential for the developments
rights. But one has to recognize the fact that this idea is not the reality
rights, one must look through their history, which will take us back to the
day when man first started living in groups. It was natural that many
20
instances might prevailed over what was right; those who held power
and the ruled were brought together in different forms in various parts of
the world. They found expression in the concept of natural, law and
(1776), the French Declaration on the Rights of man (1789), the Bolshevik
lords, though did set limitations to arbitrary rule and laid the foundation for
While the American and French Declarations set the seal on the basic
industrialization were experiencing the need more for social justice and
21
step further. It emphasized that economic and social rights were as
century there emerged a concept what was called “the Rights of Man”.
This concept covered substantially what is now known as civil and political
economic, the people of the rest of the world were more or less
peoples of the two groups generate wider awareness and demand for
human rights among the peoples under colonial rule. For them, a
declaration of great historical significance was the clarion call made at the
22
century. This development found expression in the Charter of the United
rights as one of its basic purposes and obligated member states “to take
joint and separate action in cooperation with the United Nations for the
Charter.
rights - civil and political as well as economic, social and cultural with
23
convert the norms set in the Declaration into legally binding obligations,
law as the instruments that influence and at the same time judge the
should look at certain theories of the subject so that the shifting priorities
This is the earliest theory of right and its origin can be traced
back to the ancient Greeks. According to this theory, rights belong to man
24
by nature and thus are self-evident truths. They were considered as
Paine and John Locke, to name a few, are the main exponents of this
theory. These theorists derived their ideas about rights from God, reason
identity and is expected to account his actions as per his own conscience.
they argue, lives within restraints. So restraints upon rights create social
inspired the idea that any kind of unjust, arbitrary an oppressive treatment
to human beings is an assault upon humanity itself. Apart from this, it also
provided the basis for the English, French and American revolutions,
Advocates of this theory argue that the idea of natural law and natural
25
enjoyment of fundamental rights of an individual could be better
himself. Thomas Hobbes, John Austin and Jeremy Bentham are the main
concepts and thus the rule and regulations are necessary for the
individual was to sacrifice certain rights and freedoms for the general
law alone does not create rights. Rather, it recognises and protects them.
Custom, tradition and morality also have a basis for rights. However, the
truth in this theory lies in the fact that it enables individuals to demand
State.
There are yet other theorists who strongly argue that the
priority of the well being of the maority as stated by the utilitarians is not
the prime objective of the State. Amongst them Dowrkin, Nozic and John
They hold the view that the welfare of the majority might lead
26
between the welt being of the majority and individual well-being for the
better enjoyment of social and individual rights. Today, the demand for
this theory.
Liewellyn, Roscoe Pound and others discussed the point as to what law
does, rather than what law is, in a highly complex and industrialized
Rather, they considered rights as the end product of both the interaction of
maintain and reinforce the predominant position of the ruling class.11 This
social organization and law is a tool of the State that perpetuates and
safeguards the interest of the dominant group in the society. Karl Marx
27
firmly believes that rights can exist and flourish only in a classless society
where all are equal and no one is an exploiter. Social and economic rights
are thus the main concern of this theory. However, the contribution of
social and cultural rights has been found in the International Covenant on
society, and are aimed at realising social welfare. Conditions which make
the individual and society happy are rights, and these should have
rights.12
his personality. Green, the idealist thinker of England says that rights are
28
powers necessary to the fulfillment of man’s vocation as a moral being.
Krause, Henriki and wilde said that without rights man cannot become his
best self.
individual to be linked with the individual good and the common good of
all. The theory links with moral development of man, and looks rights
essentially from the ethical point of view. The opportunities on rights are to
the individual’s ethical and moral development are created by the State.
But, extreme idealists like Hegel subordinate the individual to the State,
usages. But in the modern State, rights are recognised and supported by
usages, traditions and customs for the common good, and these unwritten
form became the basis of law, which gave rights to the individuals in
actual written form. To the primitive man, custom was unwritten law.
29
A custom which people go on following generation after
generation becomes a customary right, and this provides a basis for law.
The theory says that several rights rose as a result of historical evolution.
When the State was evolved, human beings must have had certain
Certain rights are created by law, and they do not have history as the
times, buying and selling slaves was a custom or right of the slave-dealer.
So we can see that long-standing customs can come in the way of rights
adequately explain the origin and nature of rights. Each theory in the
product of its own time and in conformity with the genius of the people with
element of truth in all such theories. But there is one eternal truth which
Society is an organic unit and welfare of the community is built upon the
30
Classification of Human Rights:
- social, economic, political, moral and civil; and secondly, from the
1. Natural Rights:
any authority. Such rights include intellectual rights, rights of the mind and
also rights of acting as an individual for his own comfort and happiness,
2. Moral Rights:
and justice. These are simply aspirations and ideals of the people who
claim for it. Sometimes, people justify these rights on the ground of the
role they perform or the position they occupy in society. For example, the
mother of a family might complain that she has the right to be consulted
about what is going on in her family. In this case, she is applying the
31
affect the members. So it is the moral duty of other members to do the
same.17
3. Fundamental Rights:
There are certain rights which are more important and basic
than the others. For example, right to life is the most basic of all rights
upon which the enjoyment of other rights depends. These rights can
society has a fundamental duty to protect at all times. Among other basic
rights are the right to be recognized as a person before the law, the right
detention.18
4. Legal Rights:
rights are laid down in law. They are also guaranteed and protected by the
law of the State. Thus, legal rights are uniform open to all irrespective of
called civil and political rights. These rights provide the basis for the
civilized life is not possible and they are, therefore, considered very
essential for the free and progressive life of man. Civil and political rights,
32
however, include the right to freedom of speech, of assembly, the right to
move freely, to hold property and practise trade or profession, and the
right to take part in the government of one's country. Part III of the
are bestowed by the State. The State is not bound to meet these
rights of the people. Right to equality, right to work, right to have family,
age and sickness, right to health care, right to special care during
more important and which are less. The representatives of some states
had been asserting that civil and political rights are more important than
33
The Vienna Declaration, issued after a Conference in which
civil, political, economic, social, cultural and collective rights ’within states
of the philosophical, political and legal values that gained ground from the
theology and feudalism took place during the period of Reformation and
were views of Locke and Montesquieu; and third was the belief in popular
natural law theory and by virtue of it they explained the nature of human
rights, that is, the rights that every human being possesses by virtue of
insight reveals to him the goodness and badness of things and makes him
34
know the absolute, eternal and moral rules. This human ‘insight’ is the
basis to Judge the law.24 However, it may be noted that the citizens of the
Greek City states enjoyed some basic rights even before the formulation
According to them, human beings are born with human rights, which are
inalienable.
after the breakdown of the Greek City states. The central notion of the
Stoic Philosophy was that the Principles of natural law were universal in
their nature.25
inanimate objects and guilty human beings. Plato the great philosopher,
The Exodus says, ‘if an ox gore a man or a woman that they die, then the
ox shall be surely stoned and his flesh shall not be eaten, but the owner of
was a guiding principle not only for the behaviour of the individual, but also
35
for the organization of society. The most outstanding among the Great
B.C). One of the main ideas of Aristotle’s ethics is that like shall be
treated as like, and unlike as unlike. King August recognized the rights of
slaves. During 500 B.C. to 483 A.D. various changes were made. During
this period women were also given some rights, including the right to
diverse.
formation and spread, Roman Law has allowed the existence of a Jus
naturale (natural law) and with pursuant to the Jus gentium (law of
citizenship.
law was that which nature not the State assures to all human beings,
and they related what they considered to be the ‘innate reason’ of man to
voice of Nature”.26
It was not until after the middle ages, however, that natural
about natural rights. One of the first attempts at codification of some thing
like a catalogue of rights can be seen in 1188 A.D. When King Alfonso IX
36
of the Kingdom of Leonso, confirmed a series of rights, including the right
other things, that no noble would be arrested without first being convicted
general social need and reality, it was necessary that basic changes in the
beliefs and practices of society take place, changes of the sort that
evolved from about the 13th century to the peace of Westphalia (1648),
during the Renaissance and the decline of feudalism. The teaching of St.
continent, and the English Bill of Rights (1689) in England, were proof of
this change.27
political and human rights. During the middle ages in England, wealthy
land owners and barons stood up to suffering they were subject to under
the rule of King John, forcing him to sign the Magna Carta. This made it
mandatory for the King to rule in a fair manner and protect the barons from
unfair treatment from the government, although the peasants were barely
37
mentioned. Today the Magna Carta is hailed as one of the most important
Magna Carta by the King, which is said to be the first milestone on the
road to the liberties of the people of England in 1215 A.D. The Magna
Carta is also known as ‘the great charter of liberty’. The English King
of his people. Its famous clause 39, stating: No freeman shall be taken or
nor send him, except by the lawful judgement of his peers or by the law of
the land has been termed as the symbol of individual liberty for centuries
» ?9
to come.
King Charles I. The King had levied taxes without approval by Parliament:
he had illegally imprisoned persons who refused the loans - all in order to
people was dealt with, for example, that nobody shall be indebted nor
38
The Petition of Right, however, is a landmark in the English
the rights and liberties of the subjects and for settling the succession of
the crown, 1689. This Act was enacted at the time when William of
Parliament in 1689, completed the work which Magna Carta had begun.
Mary were declared to be King and Queen and a clause was added that
dispensing with laws ‘as it has been exercised of late’ by the crown; (c)
consent.
39
Fourthly, a standing army was declared illegal. The Bill of
Rights is concerned particularly with limiting, the powers of the King and
which survived the conception of human rights and pressed its power for
contract writers revitalized the concept of natural rights and put forward
French Revolutions.32
*
ominous.
40
“We hold these truth to be self evident that all men are
created equal; that they are endowed with certain inalienable rights; that
fundamental rights. The Constitution came into existence in which the Bill
of Rights was part of the Constitution. Jakson J. observed that the very
The constitutional history of the United States vividly brings to force the
Rights, Thomas Jafferson was of the view that all people are entitled to it.
declared the rights of man and citizen decreed by the French National, on
August 20-26, 1789. The remarkable thing that occurs with adoption of
this declaration is that the inviolable, natural law human rights are setforth
national positive law. The French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of
41
“Men are born and remain free and equal in rights, social
distinctions can be based only upon public utility". The French Revolution
was the result of economic and social inequalities and injustices of the
ancient regime of French. The doctrine of natural law at the turn of the
countries.
The idea of human rights as natural rights was not without its
natural rights became less and less acceptable to philosophy and political
philosophical and political attack from both the right and the left.
doctrine, the former out of fear that public affirmation of natural of natural
rights would led to social upheaval, the latter out of concern lest
legislation.
42
This assault upon natural law and natural rights thus began
during the 18th century and early 20th centuries. John Stuart Mill, despite
England’s Sir Henry Maine and other historians emphasized that rights are
communities. The Jurist, John Austin insisted respectively. That the law
the modern state system, the Age of Discovery, and the accompanying
there has developed, for economic and other reasons, a unique set of
fair treatment.35
43
Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries numerous
military operations and diplomatic representations, not all of them with the
Vienna (1814-1815) and later between the two World Wars, a series of
who would or could defend the ‘rights of man’ along the lines of natural
law. Indeed, under the influence of 19th century German idealism and
consideration - the welfare of the community is the end and is the ultimate
standard.36
44
The League of Nations:
general provisions dealing with human rights and while failing to lay down
goals; fair and humane working conditions far men, women and children.
material and moral well-being and the social progress of the ‘inhabitants’
number of States.
right of all people to choose the form the government under which they will
live to see sovereign rights and seif government restored to those who
45
Roosevelt's emphasis on the ‘four freedoms’, that is,
want and freedom from fear and were incorporated into the Atlantic
Charter in August 1941 and also foreshadowed the post war Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and the decision immediately after the war,
to try German and Japanese leaders for war crimes and ‘crimes against
II. The extermination by Nazi Germany of over six million Jews, Sinti and
Romani, persons with disabilities horrified the world. Trails were held in
Nuremberg and Tokyo after World War II, and officials from the defeated
rights achieved a central place on the world stage. The founders of the
46
encouraging respect for all without distinctions as to race, sex, language
and religion.38
declarations and treaties that have given human rights a far stronger
Bill of Rights. Although that could not be done, it was well realised by the
determined that the promotion and respect for human rights which at
The result was that the Charter contains provisions for the
the preamble and in Articles 1, 13 (1) (6), 55, 56, 62 (2), 68 and 76 (c).
The Preamble of the Charter in its first substantive paragraph laid down
47
fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person,
in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small’ one
encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all
the human beings was the primary aim of the United Nations. The
General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council were given the
task for the realisation of the promotion of human rights and fundamental
provides that the United Nations shall promote, universal respect for and
observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without
48
of the purposes set forth in Article 55. Article 62 of the Charter authorizes
human rights, and such other Commissions as may be required for the
human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to
Charter, there is at present no dissent from the view that they have
was the first international document which recognised the respect for
49
law. Their recognition and their further realisation was deemed necessary
between the states and also because they are indispensable for the
wordings of Article 55 of the Charter which lays down that the United
rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex,
and well being which are necessary for peaceful and friendly relations
stated that:
attain these objectives for all men and women everywhere without regard
rights nor they were enumerated therein. The guarantee for the protection
of human rights and fundamental freedoms was also not provided therein.
50
Although it was proposed by the Latin American States during the drafting
INFERENCE:
that they may be difficult to define but impossible to ignore. The theories
and the ideologies, the politicians or statesmen, may quarrel about the
time to time.
life - social, economic, political, moral and civil; and secondly, from the
51
perspective of the methods of securing them on the basis, they are
constitutional or legal.
parallel trends having evolved over the years, particularly in the European
rights.
legal values that gained ground from the Renaissance onwards. In this
direction, first, was the rise of Protestantism, second, were views of Locke
and Montesquieu and third was the belief in popular sovereignty and
democracy.
rights a significant role the stoic philosophy. The central notion of the stoic
philosophy was that principles of natural law were universal in their nature.
Human Rights during middle ages, this period the Idea of Human Rights to
take hold as a general social need and reality and this period witnessed
52
The United Nations played an important role in the field of
Human Rights in January, 1946. The United Nations proclaimed the world
result was that the Charter contains provisions for the promotion and
53
REFERENCES:
2. Ibid., p.2.
8. Ibid., p.11.
9. Ibid., pp.11-12.
14. Ibid.
17. Ibid.
18. Ibid.
54
19. Ibid, p.7.
21. Suptadas, Arjun Dev and Indira Arjun Dev, Human Rights: A
Source Book, NCERT Publications, 1996, Introduction part.
24. Paramjit S.Jaswal. and Niswtha Jaswal, Human Rights and the
Law, (New Delhi: A.P.H. Publishing Corporation, 1996).
28. George Townsend Warner et.al. (1968): The New Ground Work of
British History: 136, London, Blackie Limited.
32. The concept of Social contract was closely linked with the Ideas of
Natural Law from which is derived in authority and Sanction,
according to manly thinkers. Thus the nations of Individual Rights,
property and justice were believed to pre-exit logically the society
in which they were operative. For further details see: 25
Encyclopedia Americana, 126-27 (1999).
55
33. The American Revolution was a conflict between Britain an 13 of
its colonies on the Atlantic Coast of North America it is also called
the American War of Independence and War of Revolution, 25
Encyclopedia American, 126-27 (1999).
36. Ibid.
40. Ibid.
41. Economic and Social Council, Official Records: First Year, First
Session (1946), Annexure, p.148.
56