kamu hakları

listen to the pronunciation of kamu hakları
Türkisch - Englisch
civil rights
Those rights which are expressly enumerated in the U.S. Constitution and are considered to be unquestionable; deserved by all people under all circumstances, especially without regard to race, creed, color, gender and disabilities
Civil rights are the rights that people have in a society to equal treatment and equal opportunities, whatever their race, sex, or religion. the civil rights movement. violations of civil rights. the rights that every person should have, such as the right to vote or to be treated fairly by the law, whatever their sex, race, or religion civil rights demonstration/movement etc
Whereas the rights of African-Americans should have been secured with the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Constitutional Amendments (1865-1868), it was actually a full century before a complete Civil Rights Act (1965) entered the books It guaranteed voting rights, which had been incomplete in the face of local registration requirements, and prohibited various sorts of discrimination and segregation This act had implications not only for blacks, but for all minorities; it spoke against gender-based discrimination also
- protections and privileges given to all U S citizens by the Constitution and Bill of rights
1 The nonpolitical rights of all citizens, especially those rights relating to personal liberty Civil rights differ from civil liberties in that civil rights are positive in nature, and civil liberties; that is, civil liberties are immunities from governmental interference or limitations on governmental action (as in the First Amendment) that have the effect of reserving rights to individuals
basic rights of citizens, civil liberties, citizen's rights
right or rights belonging to a person by reason of citizenship including especially the fundamental freedoms and privileges guaranteed by the 13th and 14th amendments and subsequent acts of Congress including the right to legal and social and economic equality
Embody the right to equal treatment under the law
The rights of citizens to liberty and equality (for example, freedom to access information or to vote)
Rights bestowed by governments on their citizens
the rights of citizens to political and social freedom and equality Disabled people are denied many rights that non-disabled people take for granted
The right of every citizen to be treated equally under the law and to have equality of opportunity The rights are granted by the Constitution, especially by amendments to the Consititution (See CONSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEES)
The rights that go with citizenship, that one acquires simply by being a citizen Not all of these are inalienable rights, however - see rights For example, a citizen may lose the right to vote if convicted of certain crimes
- The rights guaranteed to citizens by the Constitution
* The rights that go with citizenship, that one acquires simply by being a citizen Not all of these are inalienable rights, however--see rights For example, a citizen may lose the right to vote if convicted of certain crimes
The rights of a citizen of the United States that deal with the right to due process, informed consent, appeal, petition for change, equal protection under the law, adult patterns of behavior, education, equal opportunity, and opportunities in a least restrictive setting
A legal requirement that all government classifications must be reasonable
protections and privileges given to all U S citizens by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights
kamu hakları
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