Abstract: As is widely recognised, human rightsEnterprises and human rights have an individual dimension (political rightsPolitical rights , fundamental freedoms)Freedom and a collective one, like the right to self-determinationDetermination or the cultural rightsCultural rights of indigenous peoples. Nonetheless, the individual rights also have an economic and social dimension that has to do with the right to work, health or educationEducation , among others, and that explains why human rightsHuman rights , in their entirety, must be considered in their integrated form and are also strongly related to the human needs theory (Maslow 1982) as well as to the human developmentDevelopment paradigm (Neef/Elizalde 1986) and the UNDP Reports on Human Development. Therefore, if every human being has a need for affection, participation, subsistence, protection, understanding, leisure, creativity, freedom, identityIdentity and so on, these needs require the implementation of basic satisfiers through public policies implemented by the State, which is the basis of the second generation of social, economic and cultural rightsRights .
Publication Year: 2018
Publication Date: 2018-01-01
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 1
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