Week 13 Rights & Duties
Week 13 Rights & Duties
Week 13
RIGHTS AND
DUTIES
OBJECTIVES
After this instruction, students will be able to:
1. DEFINE THE MEANING OF A RIGHT;
2. IDENTIFY THE VARIOUS ELEMENTS OF RIGHTS;
3. DISCUSS THE SOURCES OF RIGHTS;
4. ENUMERATE AND PROVIDE EXAMPLES FOR KINDS OF
RIGHTS; AND
5. DISCUSS THE PROPERTIES OF RIGHTS
MEANING OF RIGHT
- Originally, right means straight, not crooked, or not distorted.
1.Subject
2.Object
3.Title
4.Term
FOUR ELEMENTS OF RIGHT
1. SUBJECT – refers to a person who is vested with the
moral power to do, to hold or to exact something as his
own.
2.OBJECT – refers to the right to which a person has a right
* NO laws, NO rights
1. Natural 6. Negative
2. Acquired 7. Alienable
3. Public 8. Inalienable
4. Private 9. Perfect
5. Positive 10. Imperfect
10 KINDS OF
RIGHTS
1. NATURAL RIGHTS
- Acquired by birth
- Also called human natural rights or human
rights
VIDEO ON UNIVERSAL DE
CLARATION OF HUMAN RI
GHTS
EXAMPLES OF HUMAN NATURAL RIGHTS
1. Right to life 11. Right to respect for his person
2. Right to freedom 12. Right to good reputation
3. Right to acquire properties 13. Right to communicate his opinion
4. Right to education 14. Right to worship God
5. Right to a livelihood 15. Right to politics
6. Right to food 16. Right to meeting and association
7. Right to clothing 17. Right to search for truth
8. Right to rest
9. Right to medical care
10. Right to work
TEN BASIC RIGHTS OF THE CHILDREN
1. Right to be born ,to have a name and
nationality
2. Right to a family
3 .Right to health
4. Right to education
5. Right to rest, leisure, cultural and artistic
activities
TEN BASIC RIGHTS OF THE CHILDREN
6. Right to be protected from abuse, exploitation
and discrimination
7. Right to express his/her views and opinions
8. Right to have access to appropriate information
9. Right to special care and assistance
10. Right to protection and privacy
10 KINDS OF
RIGHTS
2. ACQUIRED RIGHTS – which man gains
through the fulfillment of some conditions.
Examples
1. Right of parents to support their children,
2. Right of lesson to collect payment from lessee,
3. Right to demand payment of a certain debt,
10 KINDS OF
RIGHTS
10. IMPERFECT RIGHTS - those rights which
are not enforced by law.
- Also called nonjuridical rights.
1. Limitation
2. Collision
3. Inviolability
THREE PROPERTIES OF RIGHT
1. LIMITATION
- Every right has limitation; so as not to violate the right of
others.
The importance of the limitation of the right. For example, the police
official’s duty is to protect the public. It is important for him/her to
search a person’s home, limiting that person’s right to privacy, to
obtain evidence that can be used in a court.
THREE PROPERTIES OF RIGHT
2. COLLISION OF RIGHTS
- when two rights are in conflict;
- since rights originated from laws and since laws
cannot be in contradiction to one another, it follows that
rights cannot collide with one another
- Laws cannot be in contradiction to one another, it
follows that rights cannot collide with one another.
THREE PROPERTIES OF RIGHT
3. INVIOLABILITY
- Rights are intrinsically inviolable.
- Thus, if the rights of a person is violated, that person
can use physical force in defense of it or in enforcing it.
FOUR REASONS TO JUSTIFY THE USE OF
VIOLENCE IN DEFENSE OF RIGHTS
(Moralists)
1. Natural Duty
2. Positive duty
3. Affirmative duty
4. Negative duty
5. Perfect duty
6. Imperfect duty
SIX KINDS OF DUTY