What are human rights?
Human rights are concerned with equality and fairness.
There are a number of basicrights that people from around the world have agreed on.
These human rights are the same for all people everywhere.
Over the last three decades, national human rights organizations have proliferated; today, a human rights community of some sort exists in virtually every country of
Article 61 Provision 1 of the former Medical Service Act – grants exclusive license to the visually impaired, restricting the non-visually impaired to attain masseur licenses.
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Non visually impaired persons argued that this Provision is unconstitutional since it infringed on their basicrights, including their freedom of occupational choice, filing a constitutional complaint.
Free speech
Basic principles of liberal ideology
Essential to a modern democratic society
Right to know
The right to a fair trial
Independence of judiciary
The principle of open trial
The right of access to courts
Expansion of the “rights of the accused” in criminal proceedings.
Moral values
Transparency
Honesty
Fairness
Justice
Legislate against abo
3 different cases which include 8 clusters
Case1) cluster 4,7
Case2) cluster 3,5,6
Case3) cluster 1,8
Cluster2 will be discussed in our conclusion
I General measures of implementation
II Definition of a child
III General principles
IV Civil rights and freedoms
V Family environment and alternative care
VI Basic health and welfare
VII Education, leisure and cultural activities
VII
the latter 1997. The outbreak of 1997 economic crisis seriously damaged the economic achievements of the past nearly four decades.
In 1999, social assistance in Korea which had had a Poor Law tradition for forty years was finally reformed. The National Basic Livelihood Security Act of 1999 that protects fundamental human rights was enacted. The law-making process of the NBLSA was led by NGO.