Bill of rights
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- This article is about the general concept of a "bill of rights." There are specific articles about the English Bill of Rights of 1689 and the United States Bill of Rights (1791).
A bill of rights can be a statement of certain rights that may be guaranteed to citizens or residents of a society, legal jurisdiction, or nation-state; or an enumeration of rights they would like to have or believe they ought to have. In some jurisdictions, a bill of rights is included in the constitution or Basic Law of that nation-state. When embedded in a constitution, such a bill can prescribe the limits of power the government has to intervene in the lives of its citizens.
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[edit] Entrenched and unentrenched bills of rights
Usually such entrenched bills of rights have codicils that define the extent of limitation of rights in times of war or civil unrest. The rights outlined in a constitution are protected from being changed as other acts cannot contradict or contravene the provisions of an entrenched bill of rights.
A Bill of Rights may be real. This means it exists as a separate legal instrument of parliament. An unentrenched bill of rights may be weakened by other acts passed by the same parliament. If those other Acts contradict what the bill of rights sets out to protect then this can happen as the parliament making the Acts has the power to do so. A vote of the people is not required to alter the bill of rights. An unentrenched bill of rights therefore does not necessarily permanently protect rights. A statutory bill of rights is one that exists as a separate Act of parliament. As such it can be amended or repealed by the parliament that created it. It is therefore not as permanent as a constitutional bill of rights. A bill of rights that is written into the constitution of a country is a constitutional bill of rights. As such there is democratic protection of the bill of rights as the constitution containing the bill of rights cannot be changed unless it is with the approval of the voting public in that country. Rights being protected are more likely to be protected permanently.
In other jurisdictions, the definition of rights may be statutory. (In other words, it may be repealed just like any other law and does not necessarily hold greater weight than other laws). Not all jurisdictions enforce the protection of the rights articulated in their bill of rights.
[edit] "Aspirational" bills of rights
A 'bill of rights' may also be an aspirational statement of the rights that citizens ought to have even though the defining body does not have the ability to enforce the protection of those rights. The United Nations's (UN) Universal Declaration of Human Rights is currently an example, though this may be perceived as a controversial example depending on one's opinion of the UN's current ability to effectively enforce its decision.
[edit] Infringement of rights
Infringement of rights protected by a bill of rights (such as by repeal of statutory protections or by statutory infringement of constitutionally protected rights) may cause civil unrest, civil disobedience or even revolution. A common concern of libertarians is the gradual erosion of rights, especially those articulated in bills of rights. This concern is heightened during times of war or crises when certain rights may be perceived by some as a luxury compared to security concerns.
[edit] Important bills of rights
- Declaration of Women's Suffrage Rights (United States, 1876)
- Magna Carta (1215; England)
- Bill of Rights 1689 (England) and Claim of Right (Scotland)
- Virginia Bill of Rights (June 1962 )
- Preamble to the United States Declaration of Independence (July 1776)
- United States Bill of Rights to the United States Constitution (Completed in 1789, ratified in 1791)
- Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789; France)
- Basic rights and liberties in Finland (1919)
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
- Fundamental rights and duties of citizens in People's Republic of China (1949)
- European Convention on Human Rights (1950)
- Fundamental Rights of Indian citizens (1950)
- Canadian Bill of Rights (1960)
- Canadian Bill of Rights (1960)
- Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982)
- New Zealand Bill of Rights Act (1990)
- Hong Kong Bills of Rights Ordinance (1991)
- Human Rights Act 1998 (United Kingdom)
- Constitution of South Africa Chapter 2: Bill of Rights (1996)
- Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2006.5)