Free Online Dictionary
fundamental freedoms
| Wikipedia English The Free Encyclopedia | Download this dictionary |
Fundamental rights
Fundamental rights are a generally regarded set of entitlements in the context of a legal system, wherein such system is itself said to be based upon this same set of basic, fundamental, or inalienable entitlements or "rights." Such rights thus belong without presumption or cost of privilege to all human beings under such jurisdiction. The concept of human rights has been promoted as a legal concept in large part owing to the idea that human beings have such "fundamental" rights, such that transcend all jurisdiction, but are typically reinforced in different ways and with different emphasis within different legal systems.
| See more at Wikipedia.org... |
© This article uses material from Wikipedia® and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
| European Commission Glossary of Justice | home affairs | Download this dictionary |
fundamental freedoms
For EU citizens to be able to exercise fundamental freedoms particularly the right to live and work throughout the EU the judiciaries of the Member States must cooperate and standardise procedures to remove any barriers faced by the citizen in carrying out personal or economic administrative and litigious activity. (See Fundamental rights : EU Charter)
© European Communities, 1995-2004
| fundamental freedoms in Russian
You think you have ethics...
Take the survey NOW!
