Studyspark Study Document

Right Embodies the Notion That One Has Essay

Pages:2 (724 words)

Sources:6

Subject:Law

Topic:Individual Rights

Document Type:Essay

Document:#13737904


right" embodies the notion that one has the sovereignty to act without obtaining the permission of others (Lea, 2004). This concept carries an implicit unstated postscript with it in that one may exercise one's rights as long as one does not violate the individual rights of others. Individual rights pertain to the rights that are deemed universal to all people regardless of any group affiliations they may have. For example freedom of speech is considered a universal individual right in many societies. Governments are formed to protect the individual rights of all, but at the same time restrict some rights to ensure equality.

Collective rights refer to the rights that groups have, or to the rights held only by those individuals within a specified group (Lea, 2004). For instance, a certain group of indigenous people may lay claim to certain rights such as the right to live on native lands or to practice a specific religious ceremony, which may occur at the expense of those not belonging to a specific group.

Lea (2004) noted that in the West the tradition up until recently was to favor the individual rights over the collective rights of groups to allow for political and economic parity for all. However, there has been a recent shift to recognizing the importance of cultural and that the community is an important function for its members and this should be revered at the expense of some of the individual rights of those not belonging to the particular group. Thus, governments instituted empowerment programs for certain disenfranchised groups (disenfranchised by the focus on individual rights that attempted to assimilate diversity) such as those for the Aboriginal people in Australia (Tsey & Every, 2000). This resulted in heated debates over what rights are being exploited, individual or collective.

2. Basically I believe that Jack Paten and Charles Perkins were advocating for similar rights, despite the time differences and different styles of writing each used to project their concerns. Both were advocating for the incorporation of individual rights for Aboriginal people. For example Patten states:

…We don't want to be given charity. We don't want you to study us as scientific…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Lea, D. (2004). Individual autonomy: Group self-determination and the assimilation of indigenous cultures. North Australian Research Unit. Discussion Paper No. 18, 1-17.

Tsey, K. & Every, A. (2000). Evaluating Aboriginal empowerment programs: the case of family well-being. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 24(5), 509-514.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Which of the Five Ways of Resolving Moral Dilemmas Embodies the Philosophical Method...

Pages: 2 (1179 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Philosophy Document: #60978875

referents that you use to distinguish what is right from wrong in your daily life? It is common for every individual to experience ethical dilemmas. On a daily basis, we are forced to make decisions and choose the right instead of the wrong ones, in spite of multivariate pressures. In my everyday life, there are key referents that I use to distinguish what is right from wrong. For starters, one

Studyspark Study Document

Hinduism the Notion of Dharma Is a

Pages: 4 (1253 words) Sources: 1 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #32777955

Hinduism) The notion of Dharma is a primary concept in Hinduism. Dharma, or the Dharmic conduct, can be understood as a code of conduct of a person's life, guided by the morals, principles and discipline of spirituality. Hinduism describes it as the natural laws of the universe, which if observed properly, provide followers happiness and keeps them away from suffering. Its purpose is to present to the people a way

Studyspark Study Document

Vindication of the Rights of

Pages: 40 (12319 words) Sources: 12 Subject: Sports - Women Document: #94246949

Ross (1988) notes the development of Romanticism in the late eighteenth century and indicates that it was essentially a masculine phenomenon: Romantic poetizing is not just what women cannot do because they are not expected to; it is also what some men do in order to reconfirm their capacity to influence the world in ways socio-historically determined as masculine. The categories of gender, both in their lives and in their

Studyspark Study Document

Women's Rights in Judaism

Pages: 10 (3351 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #47589104

Women in Judaism: An Evolving Role in Religion and Society Many laymen to Judaism look inward into the religion and view Jewish women as oppressed, their lives and choices dictated to them by the men who surround them. From rabbis to husbands to the Bible itself, the belief has generally been that women have been essentially inferior to men since the dawn of the religion centuries ago. However, in taking a

Studyspark Study Document

Bartolom De Las Casas Human Rights Activist

Pages: 12 (4008 words) Sources: 10 Subject: Literature - Latin-American Document: #99474498

Bartoleme De Las Casas An Analysis of the Activism of Bartoleme De Las Casas Often characterized by modern historians as the "Defender and the apostle to the Indians," Bartolome de Las Casas is known for exposing and condemning as well as exaggerating and misrepresenting the violent practices of Spanish colonizers of the New World against Native Americans. Marked by emotional polemic and often embellished statistics, Las Casas' voluminous works brought him both

Studyspark Study Document

Declaration of the Rights of Man Constitution

Pages: 2 (689 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Political Science / Politics Document: #95414093

The concept of universal human rights may have been seeded by the Magna Carta, but did not reach fruition until the United States Constitution had been drafted in the late eighteenth century. Built on the Enlightenment values of individualism and inalienable universal rights, the Constitution helped lay the groundwork for the French Declaration of the Rights of the Man and of the Citizen in 1789. In fact, these two documents

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".