Abstrakt: |
Human rights are considered the achievements of civilization and include all nations, peoples and states. They are primarily aimed at the state, which does not prescribe or approve them with legal regulations, but rather guarantees them, because the purpose of human rights is to protect the human ability to work, and thus the protection of people as workers from abuse and oppression. Human rights must be respected and implemented in the legislative framework with consistent enforcement by each state. Today, human rights are a term that is easily used by lawyers, politicians and many others, but very often it is not entirely clear what all the meanings of this term have, therefore the viewpoints on what is meant by human rights can be quite different, as well as the viewpoints about how and with what human rights are threatened. Human rights are not an asset of modern society, considerations of human rights can be seen in various historical writings. Depending on the level of development of a certain society, the range of human rights was wider or narrower, as well as the forms of their endangerment. Modern society, with its numerous positive achievements, also brings with it various modalities of endangering human rights. Sometimes the forms of endangerment are blurred and difficult to see, and sometimes they are unambiguously and transparently manifest. The paper analyzes the phenomenology of threats to human rights in modern society and shows a whole range of different forms of threats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |