Individual and group rights
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Individual and group rights
Individual rights, also known as natural rights, are rights that every person has just by being human. Some people believe these rights come from God. An individual right is a moral claim to be free to act in certain ways.
Group rights, or collective rights, are rights that a group has as a whole, not just for each person in the group separately. This is different from individual rights, which belong to each person.
Individual rights and group rights sometimes do not agree with each other. In the past, group rights have been used both to take away individual rights and to help protect them. This makes it a topic that many people debate about.
Organizational group rights
Besides the rights of groups based on things that don't change about their members, there are also rights for organizations. These include countries, trade unions, corporations, trade groups, business groups, certain ethnic groups, and political parties. These organizations have rights that match what they are meant to do. For example, a company can talk to the government for all its customers or employees. A trade union can discuss better benefits with employers for all the workers in a company.
Philosophies
In the views of classical liberals and some right-libertarians, the government's job is to protect people's natural rights. Governments that care about individual rights often have rules to protect these rights, like fair trials in criminal justice.
Some rights belong to groups, like the right of peoples to decide their own future, which is written in the United Nations Charter.
Adam Smith wrote in The Wealth of Nations that each generation has the right to use the earth and what it offers. The United States Declaration of Independence talks about rights for both people and states.
Dutch legal thinker Hugo Krabbe explained different ways to think about the state.
The Soviet Union believed, following Marxism–Leninism, that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights focused too much on individual rights and not enough on group rights.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Individual and group rights, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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