Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Basic freedoms and Human Rights
- Freedoms
Anmerkungen:
- Things you are allowed to do
- source of freedoms
- statutes
Anmerkungen:
- magna carta 1215
Anmerkungen:
- all people are equal under the law -
people cannot be imprisoned without evidence against them "habeus corpus"
- Bill of rights 1689
Anmerkungen:
- Freedom of speech in parliament.
The monarch cannot interfere in the democratic process
- Human Rights Act 1998
Anmerkungen:
- incorporates the ECHR into UK law
- common law
Anmerkungen:
- Entick v Carrington (1765)
Anmerkungen:
- Police cannot enter your property without proper permission or authority
- Bushells case (1670)
Anmerkungen:
- Right to a fair trial - judge cannot influence the decision of a jury
- EU
- ECHR
Anmerkungen:
- European convention on human rights
- What are the freedoms?
- freedom of expression
Anmerkungen:
- Freedom of speech
Freedom of the press and media
important because it allows people to know what he government is doing
allows people to be educated
- Freedom of the person
Anmerkungen:
- limits unlawful stop and search
limits arrest
protects from slavery
limits time in detention before charge
important to protect people from an oppressive police force.
- Freedom of association
Anmerkungen:
- Free to hold peaceful meetings and demonstrations
Join trade unions
allows people to form groups to fight oppression and exploitation
enables people to protest about issues like war or environmental issues
- Freedom of thought and religion
Anmerkungen:
- protects right to hold a religion or other views - veganism, atheism, pacifism.
important to allow a diverse society
Protects right to observe religious rules - holy days, religious clothing
- Freedom of information
Anmerkungen:
- allows people ACCESS to information held about them and about the actions of public bodies
Limits the recording and interception of messages
important because people can know if someone holds records about them, challenge them if they are wrong
allows people some privacy
- Limits to our freedoms
Anmerkungen:
- Freedoms are not absolute.
They must be balanced betweent the needs of conflicting groups and people
- freedom of expression
- Limited to protect national security
Anmerkungen:
- official secrets act
prevents officials revealing security information
- to protect health and morals
Anmerkungen:
- restrictions on 'adult material' on television.
banning of extreme material
- prevent racial hatred
Anmerkungen:
- speech which will incite racial hatred can be unlawful
- freedom of the person
- to enable police to investigate crime
Anmerkungen:
- some stop and search and arrest is proportionate and necessary to protect society
- to prevent harm to individuals
Anmerkungen:
- detention under the Mental Health Act for people's safety is sometimes necessary
- freedom of associoation
- limited to maintain order
Anmerkungen:
- large demonstrations and marches should be properly authorised and managed to protect the safety of all
- to prevent terrorism
Anmerkungen:
- membership of a terrorist group can be illegal - Al Qaida. protects society by interfering with the organisational ability of the groups
- Human Rights
Anmerkungen:
- things you are entitled to
- Sources of Human Rights
- United Nations
- Universal Declaration 1948
Anmerkungen:
- After the 2nd world war
many nations of the world developed a document of things Humans ought to be entitled to.
Just a wish list - no legal backing
- no legal enforcement
- EU
- Convention on Human Rights
Anmerkungen:
- a comprehensive list of "articles"
the rights we can expect
- Citizens of Europe can enforce these
Anmerkungen:
- European Court of Human Rights can uphold these if member-states infringe the rights of their citizens
- European Court of Human Rights
- Parliament
- Human Rights Act 1998
- Allows UK courts to uphold rights from the ECHR
- all new laws must
be compatible
with ECHR
- evaluation
- positive
Anmerkungen:
- allows UK citizens to assert rights in national courts- faster than European Courts
allows British judges to have a role in shaping views about human rights.
Guides parliament to check new laws to make sure they are compatible with human rights
- negative
Anmerkungen:
- criticised as some say it is abused by people claiming rights to avoid normal process.
It is thought it may cause more legal claims and expense for legal aid system
undermines the idea of parliamentary supremacy - judges can question parliamentary law
- History
Anmerkungen:
- based on ideas of freedom from ancient Greece , Romans
Magna Carta and the French revolutionaries.
- Key human rights
- right to life
Anmerkungen:
- issues:
abortion
turning off life support - coma
euthanasia - Tony Nicklinson case in supreme court recently
death penalty
- right to an education
Anmerkungen:
- how to deliver this right to pupils excluded from school
- right to respect for private family life
Anmerkungen:
- issues to consider
Surveillance, CCTV
Internet and mobile phone data being stored and used to monitor for terrorism and other crime (paedophiles)
should foreign criminals who have a family in the UK be deported? balancing the punishment of individuals with the rights of the family
- right to religious freedom
Anmerkungen:
- should employers have to respect all requests for time off on faith days?
should Christians be able to express their faith with a cross or a chastity ring (when these things are otherwise forbidden by a uniform policy)?
- liberty and security
Anmerkungen:
- balancing the police need to investigate crime (stop and search, arrest) with the rights of the individual.
are police actions proportionate?
- right to free expression
Anmerkungen:
- limited by Official secrets act. should there be protection of 'whistle blowers' such as the Americans Edward Snowden and Bradley Manning who revealed US government secrets about surveillance and military wrong-doing.
- right to a fair trial
Anmerkungen:
- includes tight to be presumed innocent
consider
secret trials - government proposes to hold some terrorism trials without a jury or public gallery.
longer period without charge in terrorism cases (14 days)
Should children be tried in adult courts? could they get a fair trial?
- freedom from torture and degrading treatment
Anmerkungen:
- consider:
corporal punishment (smacking) of children.
Deporting people to countries where they may face torture (Abu Hamza case)
With-holding basic benefits from assylum seekers, who cannot legally work.
- Absolute Rights?
Anmerkungen:
- most rights are not ABSOLUTE.
they have to balanced with needs of society and the rights of others
- right to freedom from torture
- right to life
Anmerkungen:
- An absolute right - except...
where you are killed to preserve the life of another - it is necessary.
Self defence:
also
Jody and Mary - conjoined twins case