Results 161 to 170 of about 742,517 (190)
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The right to health: from citizen's right to human right (and back)
Public Health, 2019If health is a human right and if human rights are 'rights held by individuals simply because they are part of the human species', then all people, wherever they live, should be entitled to the same collective efforts that can protect or improve their health.
G. Ooms, I. Keygnaert, R. Hammonds
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Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2010
In this important book, Margaret Somers sets herself the ambitious task of developing an analytic and empirical approach to citizenship as ‘‘the right to have rights’’ and elaborates an ‘‘architectonics of citizenship’’ (p. 35) in terms of the historical, contemporary, and normative ‘‘triadic’’ institutional assemblage of state, market, and civil ...
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In this important book, Margaret Somers sets herself the ambitious task of developing an analytic and empirical approach to citizenship as ‘‘the right to have rights’’ and elaborates an ‘‘architectonics of citizenship’’ (p. 35) in terms of the historical, contemporary, and normative ‘‘triadic’’ institutional assemblage of state, market, and civil ...
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2019
The provisions of Title V lay down the rights attaching to EU citizenship. The status was introduced by the ToM and became applicable as of 1 November 1993 when that Treaty entered into force. As the status and rights of EU citizens are provided for in the TEU and TFEU, the restatement of those rights in the Charter is of essentially symbolic ...
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The provisions of Title V lay down the rights attaching to EU citizenship. The status was introduced by the ToM and became applicable as of 1 November 1993 when that Treaty entered into force. As the status and rights of EU citizens are provided for in the TEU and TFEU, the restatement of those rights in the Charter is of essentially symbolic ...
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Latin American Perspectives, 2003
Traditional theories of citizenship often link membership and rights, with one defining the other. Thus, becoming a citizen entitles the new member of society to a certain set of rights-civic, political, and social-that are generally unavailable to noncitizens (Turner, 1993). As has that of other democratic societies, U.S.
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Traditional theories of citizenship often link membership and rights, with one defining the other. Thus, becoming a citizen entitles the new member of society to a certain set of rights-civic, political, and social-that are generally unavailable to noncitizens (Turner, 1993). As has that of other democratic societies, U.S.
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2002
Study of the alienatation of citizens due to greater complexity of the legal society. Search for adequate responses.
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Study of the alienatation of citizens due to greater complexity of the legal society. Search for adequate responses.
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Citizen and Citizenship Rights
2015Abstract. Citizenship rights is a set of rights and rules that governs in macro society, state-country and is a mixture of tasks and responsibilities of citizens toward each other and/ or government in its common meaning and also rights and privileges that government should satisfy them.
JAFARI, Anoosh, BATEBI, Shahrzad
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