SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 18
Introduction
Today’s liberals and conservatives as well as libertarians all agree on a small but
significant number of classical liberal principles and practices, most importantly the words
that Thomas Jefferson used with lasting effect in the Declaration of Independence- “the
right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”- a close paraphrase of words written by
John Locke. Liberal parties throughout Europe, as is the case with the Democratic and
Republican parties including conservatives in the United States, most outspoken advocates
of economic liberalism- of capitalism. Conservatives in Europe have traditionally favored a
paternalistic economy and state controls and regulations, including even nationalization;
now they have become advocates of deregulation and a free market. Both the British
Conservatives under Margaret Thatcher (1979- 1990) and the Gaullists in France, even
since the early seventies, have moved ever closer to the tenets of free market economy.
Liberty can divide to two categories that are positive liberty and negative liberty. Positive
liberty is the possibility or the fact of acting in such a way as to take control of one’s
fundamental purposes. While negative liberty is the absence of obstacles, barriers or
constraints. Human rights are developed to protect individual’s benefit, welfare and safety.
Right is limits the validity of social benefit and focus on the individual. There are two types
of human right that is negative and positive right.
Rights
Negative rights
Put simply a negative right is the right to be left alone. Specifically it is the right to
think and act free from the coercive force of others. negative rights may include civil and
political rights such as freedom of speech, private property, freedom from violent crime,
freedom of worship, habeas corpus, a fair trial, freedom from slavery and the right to bear
armsFree from muggers, fraudsters and restrictive laws and taxes. A negative right is an
absolute. You are either free from the above or you are not. Even the slightest violation
breaks this right. Imagine that a man stops you in the street once a week and forces you to
stand still for one minute - hardly a life changing violation - yet your right to be free of the
coercion of others is being broken. The degree to which this right is violated changes from
place to place but I know of no country where it is not routinely violated by the state.
Remember that a person cannot claim this right while violating the same in others. A
mugger cannot claim a right to be left alone whilst mugging people. The kind of society
where this right is prevalent is a society whose government exists only to protect the
individual from the force of others. The American Constitution and Bill of Rights are the
closest examples - which, sadly, modern day America is abandoning daily.
Positive rights
That are rights to something. A right to food, to healthcare, to education -whatever.
positive rights may include other civil and political rights such as police protection of
person and property and the right to counsel, as well as economic, social and cultural rights
such as public education, health care, social security, and a minimum standard of living The
reality of a positive right is that whatever the object of the right is (e.g. healthcare), it needs
to be created before the 'right' can be fulfilled. This creates an obligation upon others to
create it and it is the basis for slave societies and statistic dictatorships. In the UK positive
rights exist and each person who is taxed and restricted via legislation into providing the
object of the right is working a proportion of his/her life as a slave. This may seem a bit
extreme, but it isn’t. Unless you agree entirely with your payment of every tax and
everything the government then spends your money on, you are being forced to work for
ends you have not given your consent to - just like a slave. Slavery was outlawed, but it
crept back under the guise of the 'public good'. The reason most people tolerate, or even
give apathetic support to it, is because they are not thinking about which principles are
being abandoned and which of their own rights they are giving up by doing so.
Different between positive right and negative right
A positive right imposes a moral obligation on a person or the government to do
something for an individual, while a negative right, obliges the government not to do
something, i.e. .intervene in an individual‘s life. Positive rights are economic in nature:
they involve the rights-holder being assured of the provision of some economic good such
as housing, a job, a pension, or medicine. Under most systems of social democracy, these
are provided under some manner of public welfare system, in which public funds are used
to establish public housing, works programs, social security, and the like. In contrast,
negative rights are usually not directly economic in nature, although the right to security in
private property is considered an economic negative right in that it entails freedom from
theft or state confiscation. Other negative rights include freedom of speech, freedom of the
press, freedom of religion, the right to bear arms, freedom from violent crime and freedom
from involuntary servitude. Negative rights would correspond to duties of forbearance: if X
has a negative right to V, then other's have a non-interference duty in relation to X's
enjoyment of V. Positive rights would correspond to duties of assistance: if X has a positive
right to V, then others (perhaps government) have a (positive) duty to provide X with V.
Personal character in positive right and negative right
Negative and positive right, furthermore, may be said to be quite distinct and separate
phenomena. Although utilitarian argument may be made for negative rights (like mill’s
famous case for free speech), they have always received most of their support from the
moral assertion that person have claims against other not be treated in ways thought to be
abusive, irrespective right of the social consequences (cf.dworkin, 190-92). Negative right,
then, unlike positive right .may be said to have a predominantly deontological character. on
the hand ,one can easily imagine a society (like Huxley’s brave new world),in which
everyone receives a high level of benefit from government and yet possesses no negative
rights whatever –or a high level of negative right and no benefit whatever.
Country preference negative right and positive right
A negative right is a right, either moral or decreed by law, to not be subject to an action
of another human being (usually abuse or coercion)." To use Justice Brandeis' famous
phrase more broadly than he used it, negative rights are "rights to be left alone." All
civilized legal systems beyond the village or tribal level have been systems of negative
rights. For example, Anglo-American common law defines spheres of personal space which
other persons must not invade especially spheres involving the body, residence, possessions,
and property. The only way to create positive rights in traditional common law is to
personally agree to them -- i.e. to make a contract.
The United States Constitution was drafted by people who, at least for amendments
made before the 1930s, defined rights as negative rights. Thus, when the Constitution in the
Fourteenth Amendment protects the "life, liberty, or property" and "equal protection of the
laws" to "any person," it is referring to acts which government must refrain from doing, not
to any positive duty of the government to act. The only time the government has a positive
duty to act is when it has already deprived a person of liberty (e.g., prisoners, and arguably
children compelled to attend public schools). Unfortunately, the Court since the 1940s has
departed sharply from this basic tenant of civilized law. It has read positive rights into the
Constitution, thereby depriving citizens and other persons of negative rights to which we are
entitled.
Liberty
Think of another word that comes from the Latin liber, meaning “liberty”. A classical
liberal is someone who values individual liberty and who advocates those governmental
constructions that help to guarantee that liberty. Addition, government has set up human
right such as positive right and negative right. Another that positive and negative liberal are
significant differently. Negative liberty requires only that one refrain from acting. For
instance, punch someone in the nose, walk on their property, and so on. If I have a right not
to be punched in the nose by you, you have as perfect a right not to be punched in the nose
by me. Positive rights require me not merely to refrain from acting, but to affirmatively act.
There are legally and philosophically can distinguish the workforce markets to two
different view that are one can fire someone, and require them to leave one's workplace, but
one cannot compel him to work there, even if he has signed a contract promising to do so.
Conservatives
Conservatives refer to those who prefer preserving the traditions of the past into the
present. They typically oppose rapid or radical changes. Edmund Burke was the first to
address conservatism as a philosophy, the first to analyze the basic principles and
motivations of conservatives. To be conservative, one must have something to conserve
likes property, status, power, a way of life. Conservatives more to be those who have power
or wealth or status and who simply want to keep things the way they are. For those who
live in small towns, the old, and the uneducated are can’t imagine something different, or
are afraid of change. So they want to keep their way of life the way it is.
Differing from the liberals in almost every respect, conservatives have little confidence
in human morality or intelligence. Consequently, though the would may not be as pleasant
as the conservatives might wish, they are dubious about efforts to change it for fear that
incompetent meddling might, indeed, make things worse.
Positive versus negative liberty
The simple negative or positive right distinction doesn’t really do work that most
conservatives or even moderate libertarians would want it to do because private property
and freedom of contract themselves involve positive right. To protect of private property
should be legitimate social goals. Government should take steps to protect our property and
enforce our contract. Government generally shouldn’t itself take our property because there
is indeed a negative right component to property but we are entitled to demand a certain
benefit that is property protection and contract enforcement from government.
Government given the cost of the other party’s negative right. Individual have right to
own private property likes land and demand the government keep other people from
walking the land. This is a restraint on those people’s negative liberty to go the land. The
perfectly legitimate restraint does enforce individual positive right by limiting other
negative right.
Liberals vs. Conservatives
Generally in liberal thought the right to own and control one’s private property is
essential to liberty, and the U.S Constitution reflects that idea. However, some classical
liberal thinkers thought that too much property for same individuals would hamper the
freedom of others and that the state should be involved move heavily in regulating private
property. A government ceases to be liberal, though, when it goes from regulating private
property and taxing with the people’s consent, to owning and monopolizing property itself
without the people’s consent.
Admittedly, the way of liberal thinkers view human nature, liberalism as a political
philosophy has more in common with realism than with idealism. Liberals start with the
assumption that human nature is selfish and individualistic. But unlike the ancient idealists,
and like the realists, they wish to construct laws and institutions that work with that human
nature, channeling it in positive ways, rather than trying to change human being’ minds and
hearts.
Conclusion
Conclusion, positive and negative right liberally and conservatives cannot be fully
maximized. That conservatives and libertarians have a much less coherent definition of
"liberty" than one would think, to hear them talk. For one thing, among the rights we
embrace as "negative", they clearly can conflict with each other. For example, my freedom
of speech is indeed less if I may not speak on your property; your freedom of property
clearly less if you are free to come and speak on it whether I will or no. But I think the
distinctions of reciprocity and inaction do hold, and that we have a pretty good social and
legal framework that can mediate these conflicts such that there is a stable social
equilibrium.
The Fall of Soviet Union and The Marxism
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was a socialist state that existed in
Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. Its short name is Soviet Union. Initially there is a union of
four Soviet Socialist Republics, the USSR grew to contain 16 constituent or "union
republics" by 1956. But the Soviet Union's collapse into independent nations began early in
1985. Several Soviet Socialist Republics began resisting central control, and increasing
democratization led to a weakening of the central government. The Soviet Union finally
collapsed in 1991. From 1945 until dissolution in 1991,this period known the Cold War
between the Soviet Union and the United States of America which were the two world
superpowers that dominated the global agenda of economic policy, foreign affairs, military
operations, scientific advancements and sports. In Soviet Union, there is Marxism as it has
been understood and practiced by the various socialist movements, particularly before 1914.
Then there is Soviet Marxism as worked out by Lenin and modified by Stalin, which under
the name of Marxism-Leninism became the doctrine of the communist parties set up after
the Russian Revolution. However, whether the fall of Soviet Union really means that
Marxism is dead? Karl Marx economic philosophy relate to the socialism or communism
practice in Soviet Union. Marx is the philosopher whom critics against capitalism which
characterized by private ownership of the means of production and the rule of supply and
demand. For Karl Marx, humans from their earliest beginnings are motivated by material
concerns and needs, like the need to eat and survive. At the beginning, people worked
together in unity and it wasn’t so bad. But eventually, humans developed agriculture and
the concept of private property. These two facts created a division of labor and a separation
of classes based upon power and wealth. This in turn created the social conflict which
drives society. All of this is made worse by capitalism which only increases the disparity
between the wealthy classes and the labor classes. Capitalism interrupts by introducing a
profit motive. Profit is ultimately derived from the surplus value produced by workers in
factories. So as a summary, Marx critics against capitalism based on three claims which are:
the first capitalism exist and based on exploitation of worker. For example, a labor might
produce enough value to feed his family in two hours of work, but he keeps at the job for a
full day and in Marx’s time, that might be 12 or 14 hours. Those extra hours represent the
surplus value produced by the worker. The owner of the factory did nothing to earn this,
but exploits it nevertheless and keeps the difference as profit. Capitalism as to Marx is
wage slavery. So, as this immoral practice should be replaced by socialism and eventually
by full communism so as the owner of means of production would not exploit the workers
in order to gain more profit and they should be controlled by the government.
The second claim by Marx is capitalism involves alienation of human beings.
Alienation involves domination or control of some by others and this produce other
negative effects. In capitalism economics system, the workers are alienated by the product
of their labour and also from others and the possessions for work are to live dominate them
and leave negative effects on a dull life and routine working life. Marx claims that
capitalism produce alienation because it’s a function of private property at which it is
supports by the rights to property and liberty. While Soviet Union as the example is the one
which eliminates private property. The third claim by Marx is capitalism protects the
vested interests of the few and prevents the many from achieving a better, more just and
more equitable society. This is unjust. This means that in the capitalism, the rich or whom
who have the power or authority or vested interests are protected while preventing others
people to attain a better life and equal society.
However, there are critics against Marx ideology. First and foremost is his claim on
alienation of other people. The defenders of capitalism argue that during the reign of Stalin,
The Soviet people were more suffer, oppressed and alienated from their government than
Americans have ever been. So the claim that private property is the cause of alienation
disproved. Many argued that capitalism in fact is ultimately a more effective means of
generating and redistributing wealth than socialism or communism, and that the gulf
between rich and poor that concerned Marx was a temporary phenomenon. Some suggest
that greed and the need to acquire capital is an inherent component of human behavior, and
is not caused by the adoption of capitalism or any other specific economic system. Many
observe that capitalism has changed much since Marx's time, and that class differences and
relationships are much more complex. As one example the fact that much corporate stock
in the United States is owned by workers through pension funds. Some claims that Marxist
ideologies haven’t kept up to date with the world. They have no solutions. The stagnation
of socialist centrally planned economies especially that of the Soviet Union, demonstrate
the need to reject Marxist elements.
While Marxist political parties and movements have significantly declined since the
fall of the Soviet Union.Critics argue that the Soviet Union's numerous internal failings and
subsequent collapse were a direct result of the practical failings of Marx's program, but
Marxists claim that the Soviet Union's Leninist and Stalinist policies were only
superficially similar to Marxist theory. Marx analyzed the world of his day and refused to
draw up plans of how a future socialist society. Actually Marxism not really dead or being
totally criticized by today’s modern world still has some modern Marxist supporters who
claim for him and critics for the capitalism. Like the dominant thought among modern
Marxists is the idea of "market socialism" in which the means of production are owned by
the worker or worker organizations and the economy is directed by market forces rather
than by a central bureaucracy or control. For the supporters of Marxism, they claim that
Marx never spelled out precisely how a socialist economy would look or how it would be
managed. Although the revolutions happened in the Soviet Union and China earlier in the
century were undertaken in the name of Marx, critics of the communistic societies that
emerged, is more emphasis on central planning and authoritarian rule. While these features
were from revolutionaries such as Lenin, Stalin, not Marx.Actually, Marxism is the
ideology which Karl Marx proposed and it’s became different used by different leader from
Lenin, Stalin even to the Mao Zhedong, president of China also a communist country and
also in Cuba. However, they just adopt his ideology but there are difference in proposed it
and apply on the policies of each country.
So although many moral issues and critics were raised against the capitalism and
socialism, it is difficult to absolutely determine whether either one or both are inherently
immoral and should be eliminate. For the capitalist economic system, even now many
people in the United States complain that government is out of control and they don’t know
how they are governed while the others complained the emphasis of Americans on material
goods. So, the claimed inherently immorality, pros and cons of capitalism remain open
questions so as to the socialism or communism.
Marxism
Marxism is an ideology and socioeconomic theory derived from Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels. Karl Marx was born in Trier, German on the 5 May 1818. He was an
immensely German philosopher, political economist and socialist revolutionary. Marx
pointed out a lot of issues such us alienation and exploitation of the worker, the capitalist
mode of production and historical materialism. Friedrich Engels was born in
Barmen-Elberfeld in Germany on 28 November 1820. He was a 19th century German
political philosopher. He formed the communist theory parallel with Marx. These two
men firstly met in Paris on September 1844 and they realized that they had same views on
the capitalism. They began to work together producing The Germany Ideology and the
Communist Manifesto.
The most forms of the Marxism share the principles like an attention to the material
conditions of people’s lives and social relations among people, a belief that people’s
consciousness of the conditions of their lives implies these material conditions and relations,
an understanding of class in term of distinguish relations of production and as a particular
position within such relation, an understanding of material conditions and social relations as
historically malleable, a view of history according to which class struggle, a sympathy for
working class or proletariat and a belief that the ultimate interests of workers best match
those of humanity in general.
Marxism is a fundamental ideology of the communism. Communism is the doctrine
of the conditions for the emancipation of the proletariat. (Engels, 1847a) The overall aim of
the communists was to organize society in such a way that every member of it can develop
and use all his capabilities and powers in complete freedom and without thereby infringing
the basic conditions of this society. (Engels, 1847b:92) Marx and Engels posited the
distinguishing features of communism are the abolition of private property, the abolition of
buying and selling (and the consequent disappearance of money), the abolition of he
division of labour, the abolition of the personal appropriation of the products of labours, the
abolition of countries and nationality and the abolition of the family. The transition would
be a gradual one, but would eventually result in a society where there would be the
production run by society as a whole: for the good of the society, according to a social plan,
common use of all instruments of production, common distribution of all products, labour
as means of the enriching and promoting the life of the workers, communal education of
children and openly legalized community of women.
Critics against Marxism
Many thinkers have criticized that historical materialism is an oversimplification of
the nature of the society. The influence of ideas, culture and other aspects that called as
superstructure are just as important as the economic base to the course of society, if not
more so. Indeed, historical materialism calls into question why Marx would support his
ideas so intensely if he thought that they would have no influence.
Many critics claim that to achieve the ends of the communism such as the abolition
of the private property, communist regimes always forced to use violence. As the
evidences, both purges in Soviet Russian and the Cultural Revolution in China have
murdered around 85 millions of people. Anarchists argued that Marxist communism will
inevitably lead to coercion and state domination. Mikhail Bakunin believed Marxist
regimes would lead to the despotic control of the populace by a new and not at all
numerous aristocracy.
An end which requires unjustified means is not a justifiable end. Max Weber
criticized in his 1919 lecture Politics as a Vocation state that “conduct can be oriented to an
ethic of ultimate ends or to an ethic of responsibility…Whosoever contracts with violent
means for whatever ends and every politician does is exposed to its specific consequences.
This holds especially for the crusader, religious and revolutionary alike...The leader and his
success are completely dependent upon the functioning of his machine and hence not on his
own motives”. This criticism is supported by Gandhi in the work Satyagraha, which
outlines his philosophy of non-violence. The theory of Satyagraha views means and ends as
same. Thus, it is contradictory to try to use unjust means to obtain justice or to try to use
violence to obtain the peace.
Capitalism
Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth and the means of the producing
wealth are privately owned. Through capitalism, the land, labor and capital are owned,
operated and traded by private individuals either singly or jointly, and investments,
distribution, income, production, pricing and supply of goods, commodities and services
are determined by voluntary private decision in a market economy. A distinguishing feature
of capitalism is that each person owns his or her own labor and therefore is allowed to sell
the use of it to employers. In a capitalist state, private rights and property relations are
protected by the rule of law of a limited regulatory framework. In the modern capitalist
state, legislative action is confined to defining and enforcing the basic rules of the market,
though the state may provide some public goods and infrastructure. (Source: Wikipedia
online)
Critics against Capitalism
One of the criticisms of capitalism is unequal distribution of wealth which produces
a society of gross inequality of wealth and income, that capitalism is a rich man’s economic
system and that is bad for the poor. Another criticism of capitalism is since capitalist
incentive system is based on individualistic self seeking activity, it is inconsistent with
feelings of compassion, sharing and brotherhood which make for a good society. Another
challenge to capitalism is boom or bust economy. It is true that the capitalist economy does
go through frequent contradictions or expansions. Many people also criticized capitalism is
wasteful. As long as individuals are freely to make choices and as long as corporations are
free to offer any goods and services they want, a few mistakes are emerge. One of the
mistakes is occurring surplus of the supply. In addition, the production and consumption of
some goods involves harmful side effects such as pollution that affect people not involved
in the market transaction.
Capitalism In America
Capitalism in the America works because of the America government has empowered
the Federal Reserve Bank to issue currency based on the "full faith and credit" of the
government. This means that while there is no gold or silver to back the dollar bills issued,
the US guarantees that it will honor the notes (bills). This enables ordinary people to use
the currency to exchange them for things they need or want such as groceries, auto repairs,
movie tickets and everything else that can be purchased in life. American economics are
primarily defined by capitalism, a financial system which prides itself on unlimited growth
and prosperity. Capitalism has greatly affected the lifestyles and affluence of those who live
with it and was an undeniably significant factor in the configuration of a defined American
identity. Capitalism also is the utmost reason for resentment towards the America. The
unfortunate reality of a fully capitalist society is that the highest priority is profits, and not
the well being of the consumer. As a result, Americans have created the reputation of being
greedy, dishonest, and arrogant.
The American economy continues to get worse rapidly with the overwhelming credit
crunch and major loss of confidence by consumers, businesses and investors. Usually in
credit-crunch induced recessions, firms stop spending because the banks shut up shop. Tax
cuts or just handing out cash to banks or big infrastructure projects or re-regulation are
improbable to help speed up economic recovery. Alan Greenspan was the former of Federal
Reserve Chairman which was the icon of modern America capitalism, was forced to show
his contrition in October 2008. Greenspan said that the banking and housing crisis is a
"once-in-a-century credit tsunami" and he found a "fault" in his governing ideology and
that has led him to re-examine his thinking.
The America economy is rapidly descending from a recession into a depression.
Hundreds of thousands of workers are losing their jobs each month. One out of five
workers is out of work or working part time; one out of every ten homeowners cannot meet
their mortgage payments and face eviction. The Gross National Product (GNP) will be
retreating at a rate between minus 2% to minus 5% for 2009; manufacturing is declining to
minus 6%; consumer spending is down 25%. Bankruptcy rates are at depression levels and
credit is drying up. Major of the banks survive only because of the trillion dollar
government bail-outs. Issues like unemployment, bankruptcy, credit freeze, corporate
losses and debt has devastated the domestic America economy and severely damaged the
'real economy' and stock market. The Obama administration will need to take more radical
measures to ensure that the much needed credit to businesses and consumers starts flowing
again, including nationalization and recapitalization of major banks and speed up recovery
on ordinary Americans in terms of job losses, home foreclosures and loss of other basic
supplies of life. However, the fate of many new-comers from the emerging economies of
the world is closely tied to the success or failure of capitalism in America like Brazil and
India, who hold the conservative American ideas of "economic reform" and "deregulation".
The European and Asian nations with substantial population of savers and entrepreneurs
will recover rapidly and flourish again, as long as they keep their banks and financial
institutions on a tight leash. America was faced three interrelated crises which were
economic recession, energy insecurity and the overarching climate crisis. Sustainable
capitalism is needed to build the long-term value creation.
positive and negative right of consumer

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

(016) derecho sucesorio[1]
(016) derecho sucesorio[1](016) derecho sucesorio[1]
(016) derecho sucesorio[1]TYSON28
 
Theory of social contract
Theory of social contractTheory of social contract
Theory of social contractHumairaTariq3
 
What are human rights
What are human rightsWhat are human rights
What are human rightsphakatinestar
 
Theories of corporate personality
Theories of corporate personality Theories of corporate personality
Theories of corporate personality Nitish Nawsagaray
 
International covenant on economic, social and cultural
International covenant on economic, social and culturalInternational covenant on economic, social and cultural
International covenant on economic, social and culturalHaytham Senbill
 
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderecho
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderechoNjbl14lasfuncionesdelderecho
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderechoperrones
 
Nationality & Citizenship in international law
Nationality & Citizenship in international lawNationality & Citizenship in international law
Nationality & Citizenship in international lawKeshav Choudhary
 
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudence
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudenceThe historical and anthropological school of jurisprudence
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudenceAsst. Prof. (Dr.) Shahab
 
Extincion de las obligaciones
Extincion de las obligacionesExtincion de las obligaciones
Extincion de las obligacionesBrenda Reis
 
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)maneger88
 
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....Brigitte Rosario Cerda Requena
 
human rights instruments case study
human rights instruments case studyhuman rights instruments case study
human rights instruments case studyThomas Marcinkowski
 
Historia del derecho parte 1
Historia del derecho parte 1Historia del derecho parte 1
Historia del derecho parte 1Ramón Aguayo Cid
 
Protection of Civilian population in the time of war
Protection of Civilian population in the time of warProtection of Civilian population in the time of war
Protection of Civilian population in the time of warMohammadZahirRaihanS
 
Law of Treaties - International Law
Law of Treaties  - International LawLaw of Treaties  - International Law
Law of Treaties - International LawA K DAS's | Law
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

(016) derecho sucesorio[1]
(016) derecho sucesorio[1](016) derecho sucesorio[1]
(016) derecho sucesorio[1]
 
Human Rights Framework
Human Rights Framework Human Rights Framework
Human Rights Framework
 
Theory of social contract
Theory of social contractTheory of social contract
Theory of social contract
 
What are human rights
What are human rightsWhat are human rights
What are human rights
 
Theories of corporate personality
Theories of corporate personality Theories of corporate personality
Theories of corporate personality
 
International covenant on economic, social and cultural
International covenant on economic, social and culturalInternational covenant on economic, social and cultural
International covenant on economic, social and cultural
 
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderecho
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderechoNjbl14lasfuncionesdelderecho
Njbl14lasfuncionesdelderecho
 
Nationality & Citizenship in international law
Nationality & Citizenship in international lawNationality & Citizenship in international law
Nationality & Citizenship in international law
 
Utilitarianism by Jeremy-Bentham
Utilitarianism by Jeremy-BenthamUtilitarianism by Jeremy-Bentham
Utilitarianism by Jeremy-Bentham
 
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudence
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudenceThe historical and anthropological school of jurisprudence
The historical and anthropological school of jurisprudence
 
Extincion de las obligaciones
Extincion de las obligacionesExtincion de las obligaciones
Extincion de las obligaciones
 
El contrato
El contratoEl contrato
El contrato
 
La constitucion
La constitucionLa constitucion
La constitucion
 
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)
La emancipación en los jóvenes (ensayo corregido)
 
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....
IDEOLOGÍAS POLÍTICAS CONTEMPORÁNEAS- Derecho y Ciencias Políticas III "A"- U....
 
human rights instruments case study
human rights instruments case studyhuman rights instruments case study
human rights instruments case study
 
Historia del derecho parte 1
Historia del derecho parte 1Historia del derecho parte 1
Historia del derecho parte 1
 
Protection of Civilian population in the time of war
Protection of Civilian population in the time of warProtection of Civilian population in the time of war
Protection of Civilian population in the time of war
 
Human rights powerpoint
Human rights powerpointHuman rights powerpoint
Human rights powerpoint
 
Law of Treaties - International Law
Law of Treaties  - International LawLaw of Treaties  - International Law
Law of Treaties - International Law
 

Andere mochten auch

Expressing Invitation and Offer
Expressing Invitation and OfferExpressing Invitation and Offer
Expressing Invitation and Offerrieyusan
 
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer them
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer themTop ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer them
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer themMartin Johansen
 
Ecological economics. Farber & bradley
Ecological economics. Farber & bradleyEcological economics. Farber & bradley
Ecological economics. Farber & bradleyIntrosust
 
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialismAlwyn Dalmeida
 
The eight basic consumer rights
The eight basic consumer rightsThe eight basic consumer rights
The eight basic consumer rightsMlshin Lao
 
Environmental threats
Environmental threatsEnvironmental threats
Environmental threatsAna Mena
 
Ecological Economics !101Pres
Ecological Economics !101PresEcological Economics !101Pres
Ecological Economics !101PresRobertoPiccioni2
 
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservation
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservationEcological economics and biodiversity conservation
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservationSaroj Upadhyay
 
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...Heickal Pradinanta
 
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociologyJohn Bradford
 
Discrimination in employment 2013
Discrimination in employment 2013Discrimination in employment 2013
Discrimination in employment 2013emilykreger
 
Offers and Invitations
Offers and InvitationsOffers and Invitations
Offers and InvitationstheLecturette
 
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.Kevin John
 
Discrimination at work
Discrimination at workDiscrimination at work
Discrimination at workalben1983
 
Positive and negative freedom 1
Positive and negative freedom 1Positive and negative freedom 1
Positive and negative freedom 1aquinaspolitics
 
Environmental Geography- An Intro
Environmental Geography- An IntroEnvironmental Geography- An Intro
Environmental Geography- An IntroMr Melson
 
environmental laws
environmental lawsenvironmental laws
environmental lawsSubham Dhar
 

Andere mochten auch (20)

Expressing Invitation and Offer
Expressing Invitation and OfferExpressing Invitation and Offer
Expressing Invitation and Offer
 
All About Miranda Rights
All About Miranda RightsAll About Miranda Rights
All About Miranda Rights
 
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer them
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer themTop ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer them
Top ten arguments against capitalism and how one can answer them
 
Ecological economics. Farber & bradley
Ecological economics. Farber & bradleyEcological economics. Farber & bradley
Ecological economics. Farber & bradley
 
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism
5 utilitarianism cognitivism and consequentialism
 
The eight basic consumer rights
The eight basic consumer rightsThe eight basic consumer rights
The eight basic consumer rights
 
Environmental LAW
Environmental LAWEnvironmental LAW
Environmental LAW
 
Environmental threats
Environmental threatsEnvironmental threats
Environmental threats
 
Ecological Economics !101Pres
Ecological Economics !101PresEcological Economics !101Pres
Ecological Economics !101Pres
 
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservation
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservationEcological economics and biodiversity conservation
Ecological economics and biodiversity conservation
 
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...
The ethics of job discrimination (chapter 7) and The individual in the organi...
 
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology
1 29-13 welcome introduction to environ sociology
 
Discrimination in employment 2013
Discrimination in employment 2013Discrimination in employment 2013
Discrimination in employment 2013
 
Offers and Invitations
Offers and InvitationsOffers and Invitations
Offers and Invitations
 
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.
Ethics- Discrimination in workplace.
 
Rights Theory
Rights TheoryRights Theory
Rights Theory
 
Discrimination at work
Discrimination at workDiscrimination at work
Discrimination at work
 
Positive and negative freedom 1
Positive and negative freedom 1Positive and negative freedom 1
Positive and negative freedom 1
 
Environmental Geography- An Intro
Environmental Geography- An IntroEnvironmental Geography- An Intro
Environmental Geography- An Intro
 
environmental laws
environmental lawsenvironmental laws
environmental laws
 

Ähnlich wie positive and negative right of consumer (15)

2009-09-12 FNF - What is Liberalism?
2009-09-12 FNF -  What is Liberalism?2009-09-12 FNF -  What is Liberalism?
2009-09-12 FNF - What is Liberalism?
 
Moderate political ideologies
Moderate political ideologiesModerate political ideologies
Moderate political ideologies
 
Means ideology
Means ideologyMeans ideology
Means ideology
 
democratic rights.ppt
democratic rights.pptdemocratic rights.ppt
democratic rights.ppt
 
An Introduction to Libertarianism
An Introduction to LibertarianismAn Introduction to Libertarianism
An Introduction to Libertarianism
 
Thinkers
ThinkersThinkers
Thinkers
 
Positive and negative right
Positive and negative rightPositive and negative right
Positive and negative right
 
Liberty, Freedom and Rights
Liberty, Freedom and RightsLiberty, Freedom and Rights
Liberty, Freedom and Rights
 
How Free Are You?
How Free Are You?  How Free Are You?
How Free Are You?
 
GROUP 11 RIGHTS-AND-DUTIES-3 (2).pptx
GROUP 11 RIGHTS-AND-DUTIES-3 (2).pptxGROUP 11 RIGHTS-AND-DUTIES-3 (2).pptx
GROUP 11 RIGHTS-AND-DUTIES-3 (2).pptx
 
Liberty
LibertyLiberty
Liberty
 
Social essay
Social essaySocial essay
Social essay
 
Human Rights - 1.pptx
Human Rights - 1.pptxHuman Rights - 1.pptx
Human Rights - 1.pptx
 
The Constitution is the framework for the governance of th.docx
The Constitution is the framework for the governance of th.docxThe Constitution is the framework for the governance of th.docx
The Constitution is the framework for the governance of th.docx
 
Please respond to the 3 discussion questions in its entirety.pdf
Please respond to the 3 discussion questions in its entirety.pdfPlease respond to the 3 discussion questions in its entirety.pdf
Please respond to the 3 discussion questions in its entirety.pdf
 

Mehr von mandalina landy

securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahsecuritization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahmandalina landy
 
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL mandalina landy
 
Glossary islamic finance intruments
Glossary islamic finance intrumentsGlossary islamic finance intruments
Glossary islamic finance intrumentsmandalina landy
 
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahsecuritization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahmandalina landy
 
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...mandalina landy
 
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukur
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan PengukurPembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukur
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukurmandalina landy
 
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensional
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal KonvensionalPerbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensional
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensionalmandalina landy
 
Keselamatan barangan plastik
Keselamatan barangan plastikKeselamatan barangan plastik
Keselamatan barangan plastikmandalina landy
 
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...mandalina landy
 
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR  KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR mandalina landy
 
teori percampuran dan pertukaran musyarakah
teori percampuran dan pertukaran  musyarakahteori percampuran dan pertukaran  musyarakah
teori percampuran dan pertukaran musyarakahmandalina landy
 
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarah
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarahsecuritization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarah
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarahmandalina landy
 
bai as-salam and istisna
bai as-salam and istisnabai as-salam and istisna
bai as-salam and istisnamandalina landy
 
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)mandalina landy
 
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islam
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islamtransaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islam
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islammandalina landy
 

Mehr von mandalina landy (20)

securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahsecuritization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
 
Presentation final
Presentation finalPresentation final
Presentation final
 
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL
PERBEZAAN PELABURAN DALAM PASARAN MODAL ISLAM DENGAN PASARAN MODAL KONVENSIONAL
 
Glossary islamic finance intruments
Glossary islamic finance intrumentsGlossary islamic finance intruments
Glossary islamic finance intruments
 
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarahsecuritization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
securitization+musyarakah+murabahah+and+ijarah
 
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...
KAJIAN MENGENAI AMALAN DAN TINGKAHLAKU PENGGUNA TERHADAP PENGGUNAAN LESTARI K...
 
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukur
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan PengukurPembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukur
Pembangunan Lestari Pengertian Dan Pengukur
 
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensional
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal KonvensionalPerbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensional
Perbezaan Pelaburan dalam Pasaran Modal Islam dengan Pasaran Modal Konvensional
 
Keselamatan barangan plastik
Keselamatan barangan plastikKeselamatan barangan plastik
Keselamatan barangan plastik
 
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...
Tahap Kepuasan Mahasiswa Terhadap Perkhidmatan Bas Di Universiti Putra Malays...
 
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR  KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR
KEPUASAN PERUMAHAN DAN PERSEKITARAN REMAJA DI RUMAH PANGSA, KUALA LUMPUR
 
teori percampuran dan pertukaran musyarakah
teori percampuran dan pertukaran  musyarakahteori percampuran dan pertukaran  musyarakah
teori percampuran dan pertukaran musyarakah
 
sukuk - islamic bond
sukuk - islamic bondsukuk - islamic bond
sukuk - islamic bond
 
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarah
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarahsecuritization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarah
securitization and musyarakah+murabahah and ijarah
 
shirkah dan mudharabah
shirkah dan mudharabah shirkah dan mudharabah
shirkah dan mudharabah
 
bai as-salam and istisna
bai as-salam and istisnabai as-salam and istisna
bai as-salam and istisna
 
islam dan perniagaan
islam dan perniagaanislam dan perniagaan
islam dan perniagaan
 
al ijarah
al ijarahal ijarah
al ijarah
 
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)
murabaha and bai bithaman ajil (kontrak jual beli)
 
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islam
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islamtransaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islam
transaksi yang dilarang dlm syariah islam
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...The Lifesciences Magazine
 
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxForeign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxunark75
 
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxPolitical-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxSasikiranMarri
 
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptx
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptxlok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptx
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptxdigiyvbmrkt
 
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivity
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road ConnectivityTransforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivity
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivitynarsireddynannuri1
 
Emerging issues in migration policies.ppt
Emerging issues in migration policies.pptEmerging issues in migration policies.ppt
Emerging issues in migration policies.pptNandinituteja1
 
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)Power in International Relations (Pol 5)
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)ssuser583c35
 
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptGeostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptUsmanKaran
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (14)

14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
14042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...
Mitochondrial Fusion Vital for Adult Brain Function and Disease Understanding...
 
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxForeign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
 
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
12042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxPolitical-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
 
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptx
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptxlok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptx
lok sabha Elections in india- 2024 .pptx
 
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
13042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivity
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road ConnectivityTransforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivity
Transforming Andhra Pradesh: TDP's Legacy in Road Connectivity
 
Emerging issues in migration policies.ppt
Emerging issues in migration policies.pptEmerging issues in migration policies.ppt
Emerging issues in migration policies.ppt
 
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)Power in International Relations (Pol 5)
Power in International Relations (Pol 5)
 
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
11042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptGeostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
 

positive and negative right of consumer

  • 1. Introduction Today’s liberals and conservatives as well as libertarians all agree on a small but significant number of classical liberal principles and practices, most importantly the words that Thomas Jefferson used with lasting effect in the Declaration of Independence- “the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”- a close paraphrase of words written by John Locke. Liberal parties throughout Europe, as is the case with the Democratic and Republican parties including conservatives in the United States, most outspoken advocates of economic liberalism- of capitalism. Conservatives in Europe have traditionally favored a paternalistic economy and state controls and regulations, including even nationalization; now they have become advocates of deregulation and a free market. Both the British Conservatives under Margaret Thatcher (1979- 1990) and the Gaullists in France, even since the early seventies, have moved ever closer to the tenets of free market economy. Liberty can divide to two categories that are positive liberty and negative liberty. Positive liberty is the possibility or the fact of acting in such a way as to take control of one’s fundamental purposes. While negative liberty is the absence of obstacles, barriers or constraints. Human rights are developed to protect individual’s benefit, welfare and safety. Right is limits the validity of social benefit and focus on the individual. There are two types of human right that is negative and positive right. Rights Negative rights Put simply a negative right is the right to be left alone. Specifically it is the right to think and act free from the coercive force of others. negative rights may include civil and political rights such as freedom of speech, private property, freedom from violent crime, freedom of worship, habeas corpus, a fair trial, freedom from slavery and the right to bear
  • 2. armsFree from muggers, fraudsters and restrictive laws and taxes. A negative right is an absolute. You are either free from the above or you are not. Even the slightest violation breaks this right. Imagine that a man stops you in the street once a week and forces you to stand still for one minute - hardly a life changing violation - yet your right to be free of the coercion of others is being broken. The degree to which this right is violated changes from place to place but I know of no country where it is not routinely violated by the state. Remember that a person cannot claim this right while violating the same in others. A mugger cannot claim a right to be left alone whilst mugging people. The kind of society where this right is prevalent is a society whose government exists only to protect the individual from the force of others. The American Constitution and Bill of Rights are the closest examples - which, sadly, modern day America is abandoning daily. Positive rights That are rights to something. A right to food, to healthcare, to education -whatever. positive rights may include other civil and political rights such as police protection of person and property and the right to counsel, as well as economic, social and cultural rights such as public education, health care, social security, and a minimum standard of living The reality of a positive right is that whatever the object of the right is (e.g. healthcare), it needs to be created before the 'right' can be fulfilled. This creates an obligation upon others to create it and it is the basis for slave societies and statistic dictatorships. In the UK positive rights exist and each person who is taxed and restricted via legislation into providing the object of the right is working a proportion of his/her life as a slave. This may seem a bit extreme, but it isn’t. Unless you agree entirely with your payment of every tax and
  • 3. everything the government then spends your money on, you are being forced to work for ends you have not given your consent to - just like a slave. Slavery was outlawed, but it crept back under the guise of the 'public good'. The reason most people tolerate, or even give apathetic support to it, is because they are not thinking about which principles are being abandoned and which of their own rights they are giving up by doing so. Different between positive right and negative right A positive right imposes a moral obligation on a person or the government to do something for an individual, while a negative right, obliges the government not to do something, i.e. .intervene in an individual‘s life. Positive rights are economic in nature: they involve the rights-holder being assured of the provision of some economic good such as housing, a job, a pension, or medicine. Under most systems of social democracy, these are provided under some manner of public welfare system, in which public funds are used to establish public housing, works programs, social security, and the like. In contrast, negative rights are usually not directly economic in nature, although the right to security in private property is considered an economic negative right in that it entails freedom from theft or state confiscation. Other negative rights include freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, the right to bear arms, freedom from violent crime and freedom from involuntary servitude. Negative rights would correspond to duties of forbearance: if X has a negative right to V, then other's have a non-interference duty in relation to X's enjoyment of V. Positive rights would correspond to duties of assistance: if X has a positive right to V, then others (perhaps government) have a (positive) duty to provide X with V.
  • 4. Personal character in positive right and negative right Negative and positive right, furthermore, may be said to be quite distinct and separate phenomena. Although utilitarian argument may be made for negative rights (like mill’s famous case for free speech), they have always received most of their support from the moral assertion that person have claims against other not be treated in ways thought to be abusive, irrespective right of the social consequences (cf.dworkin, 190-92). Negative right, then, unlike positive right .may be said to have a predominantly deontological character. on the hand ,one can easily imagine a society (like Huxley’s brave new world),in which everyone receives a high level of benefit from government and yet possesses no negative rights whatever –or a high level of negative right and no benefit whatever. Country preference negative right and positive right A negative right is a right, either moral or decreed by law, to not be subject to an action of another human being (usually abuse or coercion)." To use Justice Brandeis' famous phrase more broadly than he used it, negative rights are "rights to be left alone." All civilized legal systems beyond the village or tribal level have been systems of negative rights. For example, Anglo-American common law defines spheres of personal space which other persons must not invade especially spheres involving the body, residence, possessions, and property. The only way to create positive rights in traditional common law is to personally agree to them -- i.e. to make a contract. The United States Constitution was drafted by people who, at least for amendments made before the 1930s, defined rights as negative rights. Thus, when the Constitution in the
  • 5. Fourteenth Amendment protects the "life, liberty, or property" and "equal protection of the laws" to "any person," it is referring to acts which government must refrain from doing, not to any positive duty of the government to act. The only time the government has a positive duty to act is when it has already deprived a person of liberty (e.g., prisoners, and arguably children compelled to attend public schools). Unfortunately, the Court since the 1940s has departed sharply from this basic tenant of civilized law. It has read positive rights into the Constitution, thereby depriving citizens and other persons of negative rights to which we are entitled. Liberty Think of another word that comes from the Latin liber, meaning “liberty”. A classical liberal is someone who values individual liberty and who advocates those governmental constructions that help to guarantee that liberty. Addition, government has set up human right such as positive right and negative right. Another that positive and negative liberal are significant differently. Negative liberty requires only that one refrain from acting. For instance, punch someone in the nose, walk on their property, and so on. If I have a right not to be punched in the nose by you, you have as perfect a right not to be punched in the nose by me. Positive rights require me not merely to refrain from acting, but to affirmatively act. There are legally and philosophically can distinguish the workforce markets to two different view that are one can fire someone, and require them to leave one's workplace, but one cannot compel him to work there, even if he has signed a contract promising to do so. Conservatives Conservatives refer to those who prefer preserving the traditions of the past into the present. They typically oppose rapid or radical changes. Edmund Burke was the first to address conservatism as a philosophy, the first to analyze the basic principles and
  • 6. motivations of conservatives. To be conservative, one must have something to conserve likes property, status, power, a way of life. Conservatives more to be those who have power or wealth or status and who simply want to keep things the way they are. For those who live in small towns, the old, and the uneducated are can’t imagine something different, or are afraid of change. So they want to keep their way of life the way it is. Differing from the liberals in almost every respect, conservatives have little confidence in human morality or intelligence. Consequently, though the would may not be as pleasant as the conservatives might wish, they are dubious about efforts to change it for fear that incompetent meddling might, indeed, make things worse. Positive versus negative liberty The simple negative or positive right distinction doesn’t really do work that most conservatives or even moderate libertarians would want it to do because private property and freedom of contract themselves involve positive right. To protect of private property should be legitimate social goals. Government should take steps to protect our property and enforce our contract. Government generally shouldn’t itself take our property because there is indeed a negative right component to property but we are entitled to demand a certain benefit that is property protection and contract enforcement from government. Government given the cost of the other party’s negative right. Individual have right to own private property likes land and demand the government keep other people from walking the land. This is a restraint on those people’s negative liberty to go the land. The perfectly legitimate restraint does enforce individual positive right by limiting other negative right. Liberals vs. Conservatives Generally in liberal thought the right to own and control one’s private property is essential to liberty, and the U.S Constitution reflects that idea. However, some classical
  • 7. liberal thinkers thought that too much property for same individuals would hamper the freedom of others and that the state should be involved move heavily in regulating private property. A government ceases to be liberal, though, when it goes from regulating private property and taxing with the people’s consent, to owning and monopolizing property itself without the people’s consent. Admittedly, the way of liberal thinkers view human nature, liberalism as a political philosophy has more in common with realism than with idealism. Liberals start with the assumption that human nature is selfish and individualistic. But unlike the ancient idealists, and like the realists, they wish to construct laws and institutions that work with that human nature, channeling it in positive ways, rather than trying to change human being’ minds and hearts. Conclusion Conclusion, positive and negative right liberally and conservatives cannot be fully maximized. That conservatives and libertarians have a much less coherent definition of "liberty" than one would think, to hear them talk. For one thing, among the rights we embrace as "negative", they clearly can conflict with each other. For example, my freedom of speech is indeed less if I may not speak on your property; your freedom of property clearly less if you are free to come and speak on it whether I will or no. But I think the distinctions of reciprocity and inaction do hold, and that we have a pretty good social and legal framework that can mediate these conflicts such that there is a stable social equilibrium. The Fall of Soviet Union and The Marxism The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was a socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. Its short name is Soviet Union. Initially there is a union of
  • 8. four Soviet Socialist Republics, the USSR grew to contain 16 constituent or "union republics" by 1956. But the Soviet Union's collapse into independent nations began early in 1985. Several Soviet Socialist Republics began resisting central control, and increasing democratization led to a weakening of the central government. The Soviet Union finally collapsed in 1991. From 1945 until dissolution in 1991,this period known the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States of America which were the two world superpowers that dominated the global agenda of economic policy, foreign affairs, military operations, scientific advancements and sports. In Soviet Union, there is Marxism as it has been understood and practiced by the various socialist movements, particularly before 1914. Then there is Soviet Marxism as worked out by Lenin and modified by Stalin, which under the name of Marxism-Leninism became the doctrine of the communist parties set up after the Russian Revolution. However, whether the fall of Soviet Union really means that Marxism is dead? Karl Marx economic philosophy relate to the socialism or communism practice in Soviet Union. Marx is the philosopher whom critics against capitalism which characterized by private ownership of the means of production and the rule of supply and demand. For Karl Marx, humans from their earliest beginnings are motivated by material concerns and needs, like the need to eat and survive. At the beginning, people worked together in unity and it wasn’t so bad. But eventually, humans developed agriculture and the concept of private property. These two facts created a division of labor and a separation of classes based upon power and wealth. This in turn created the social conflict which drives society. All of this is made worse by capitalism which only increases the disparity between the wealthy classes and the labor classes. Capitalism interrupts by introducing a
  • 9. profit motive. Profit is ultimately derived from the surplus value produced by workers in factories. So as a summary, Marx critics against capitalism based on three claims which are: the first capitalism exist and based on exploitation of worker. For example, a labor might produce enough value to feed his family in two hours of work, but he keeps at the job for a full day and in Marx’s time, that might be 12 or 14 hours. Those extra hours represent the surplus value produced by the worker. The owner of the factory did nothing to earn this, but exploits it nevertheless and keeps the difference as profit. Capitalism as to Marx is wage slavery. So, as this immoral practice should be replaced by socialism and eventually by full communism so as the owner of means of production would not exploit the workers in order to gain more profit and they should be controlled by the government. The second claim by Marx is capitalism involves alienation of human beings. Alienation involves domination or control of some by others and this produce other negative effects. In capitalism economics system, the workers are alienated by the product of their labour and also from others and the possessions for work are to live dominate them and leave negative effects on a dull life and routine working life. Marx claims that capitalism produce alienation because it’s a function of private property at which it is supports by the rights to property and liberty. While Soviet Union as the example is the one which eliminates private property. The third claim by Marx is capitalism protects the vested interests of the few and prevents the many from achieving a better, more just and more equitable society. This is unjust. This means that in the capitalism, the rich or whom who have the power or authority or vested interests are protected while preventing others people to attain a better life and equal society.
  • 10. However, there are critics against Marx ideology. First and foremost is his claim on alienation of other people. The defenders of capitalism argue that during the reign of Stalin, The Soviet people were more suffer, oppressed and alienated from their government than Americans have ever been. So the claim that private property is the cause of alienation disproved. Many argued that capitalism in fact is ultimately a more effective means of generating and redistributing wealth than socialism or communism, and that the gulf between rich and poor that concerned Marx was a temporary phenomenon. Some suggest that greed and the need to acquire capital is an inherent component of human behavior, and is not caused by the adoption of capitalism or any other specific economic system. Many observe that capitalism has changed much since Marx's time, and that class differences and relationships are much more complex. As one example the fact that much corporate stock in the United States is owned by workers through pension funds. Some claims that Marxist ideologies haven’t kept up to date with the world. They have no solutions. The stagnation of socialist centrally planned economies especially that of the Soviet Union, demonstrate the need to reject Marxist elements. While Marxist political parties and movements have significantly declined since the fall of the Soviet Union.Critics argue that the Soviet Union's numerous internal failings and subsequent collapse were a direct result of the practical failings of Marx's program, but Marxists claim that the Soviet Union's Leninist and Stalinist policies were only superficially similar to Marxist theory. Marx analyzed the world of his day and refused to draw up plans of how a future socialist society. Actually Marxism not really dead or being totally criticized by today’s modern world still has some modern Marxist supporters who
  • 11. claim for him and critics for the capitalism. Like the dominant thought among modern Marxists is the idea of "market socialism" in which the means of production are owned by the worker or worker organizations and the economy is directed by market forces rather than by a central bureaucracy or control. For the supporters of Marxism, they claim that Marx never spelled out precisely how a socialist economy would look or how it would be managed. Although the revolutions happened in the Soviet Union and China earlier in the century were undertaken in the name of Marx, critics of the communistic societies that emerged, is more emphasis on central planning and authoritarian rule. While these features were from revolutionaries such as Lenin, Stalin, not Marx.Actually, Marxism is the ideology which Karl Marx proposed and it’s became different used by different leader from Lenin, Stalin even to the Mao Zhedong, president of China also a communist country and also in Cuba. However, they just adopt his ideology but there are difference in proposed it and apply on the policies of each country. So although many moral issues and critics were raised against the capitalism and socialism, it is difficult to absolutely determine whether either one or both are inherently immoral and should be eliminate. For the capitalist economic system, even now many people in the United States complain that government is out of control and they don’t know how they are governed while the others complained the emphasis of Americans on material goods. So, the claimed inherently immorality, pros and cons of capitalism remain open questions so as to the socialism or communism. Marxism Marxism is an ideology and socioeconomic theory derived from Karl Marx and
  • 12. Friedrich Engels. Karl Marx was born in Trier, German on the 5 May 1818. He was an immensely German philosopher, political economist and socialist revolutionary. Marx pointed out a lot of issues such us alienation and exploitation of the worker, the capitalist mode of production and historical materialism. Friedrich Engels was born in Barmen-Elberfeld in Germany on 28 November 1820. He was a 19th century German political philosopher. He formed the communist theory parallel with Marx. These two men firstly met in Paris on September 1844 and they realized that they had same views on the capitalism. They began to work together producing The Germany Ideology and the Communist Manifesto. The most forms of the Marxism share the principles like an attention to the material conditions of people’s lives and social relations among people, a belief that people’s consciousness of the conditions of their lives implies these material conditions and relations, an understanding of class in term of distinguish relations of production and as a particular position within such relation, an understanding of material conditions and social relations as historically malleable, a view of history according to which class struggle, a sympathy for working class or proletariat and a belief that the ultimate interests of workers best match those of humanity in general. Marxism is a fundamental ideology of the communism. Communism is the doctrine of the conditions for the emancipation of the proletariat. (Engels, 1847a) The overall aim of the communists was to organize society in such a way that every member of it can develop and use all his capabilities and powers in complete freedom and without thereby infringing
  • 13. the basic conditions of this society. (Engels, 1847b:92) Marx and Engels posited the distinguishing features of communism are the abolition of private property, the abolition of buying and selling (and the consequent disappearance of money), the abolition of he division of labour, the abolition of the personal appropriation of the products of labours, the abolition of countries and nationality and the abolition of the family. The transition would be a gradual one, but would eventually result in a society where there would be the production run by society as a whole: for the good of the society, according to a social plan, common use of all instruments of production, common distribution of all products, labour as means of the enriching and promoting the life of the workers, communal education of children and openly legalized community of women. Critics against Marxism Many thinkers have criticized that historical materialism is an oversimplification of the nature of the society. The influence of ideas, culture and other aspects that called as superstructure are just as important as the economic base to the course of society, if not more so. Indeed, historical materialism calls into question why Marx would support his ideas so intensely if he thought that they would have no influence. Many critics claim that to achieve the ends of the communism such as the abolition of the private property, communist regimes always forced to use violence. As the evidences, both purges in Soviet Russian and the Cultural Revolution in China have murdered around 85 millions of people. Anarchists argued that Marxist communism will
  • 14. inevitably lead to coercion and state domination. Mikhail Bakunin believed Marxist regimes would lead to the despotic control of the populace by a new and not at all numerous aristocracy. An end which requires unjustified means is not a justifiable end. Max Weber criticized in his 1919 lecture Politics as a Vocation state that “conduct can be oriented to an ethic of ultimate ends or to an ethic of responsibility…Whosoever contracts with violent means for whatever ends and every politician does is exposed to its specific consequences. This holds especially for the crusader, religious and revolutionary alike...The leader and his success are completely dependent upon the functioning of his machine and hence not on his own motives”. This criticism is supported by Gandhi in the work Satyagraha, which outlines his philosophy of non-violence. The theory of Satyagraha views means and ends as same. Thus, it is contradictory to try to use unjust means to obtain justice or to try to use violence to obtain the peace. Capitalism Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth and the means of the producing wealth are privately owned. Through capitalism, the land, labor and capital are owned, operated and traded by private individuals either singly or jointly, and investments, distribution, income, production, pricing and supply of goods, commodities and services are determined by voluntary private decision in a market economy. A distinguishing feature of capitalism is that each person owns his or her own labor and therefore is allowed to sell the use of it to employers. In a capitalist state, private rights and property relations are
  • 15. protected by the rule of law of a limited regulatory framework. In the modern capitalist state, legislative action is confined to defining and enforcing the basic rules of the market, though the state may provide some public goods and infrastructure. (Source: Wikipedia online) Critics against Capitalism One of the criticisms of capitalism is unequal distribution of wealth which produces a society of gross inequality of wealth and income, that capitalism is a rich man’s economic system and that is bad for the poor. Another criticism of capitalism is since capitalist incentive system is based on individualistic self seeking activity, it is inconsistent with feelings of compassion, sharing and brotherhood which make for a good society. Another challenge to capitalism is boom or bust economy. It is true that the capitalist economy does go through frequent contradictions or expansions. Many people also criticized capitalism is wasteful. As long as individuals are freely to make choices and as long as corporations are free to offer any goods and services they want, a few mistakes are emerge. One of the mistakes is occurring surplus of the supply. In addition, the production and consumption of some goods involves harmful side effects such as pollution that affect people not involved in the market transaction. Capitalism In America Capitalism in the America works because of the America government has empowered the Federal Reserve Bank to issue currency based on the "full faith and credit" of the
  • 16. government. This means that while there is no gold or silver to back the dollar bills issued, the US guarantees that it will honor the notes (bills). This enables ordinary people to use the currency to exchange them for things they need or want such as groceries, auto repairs, movie tickets and everything else that can be purchased in life. American economics are primarily defined by capitalism, a financial system which prides itself on unlimited growth and prosperity. Capitalism has greatly affected the lifestyles and affluence of those who live with it and was an undeniably significant factor in the configuration of a defined American identity. Capitalism also is the utmost reason for resentment towards the America. The unfortunate reality of a fully capitalist society is that the highest priority is profits, and not the well being of the consumer. As a result, Americans have created the reputation of being greedy, dishonest, and arrogant. The American economy continues to get worse rapidly with the overwhelming credit crunch and major loss of confidence by consumers, businesses and investors. Usually in credit-crunch induced recessions, firms stop spending because the banks shut up shop. Tax cuts or just handing out cash to banks or big infrastructure projects or re-regulation are improbable to help speed up economic recovery. Alan Greenspan was the former of Federal Reserve Chairman which was the icon of modern America capitalism, was forced to show his contrition in October 2008. Greenspan said that the banking and housing crisis is a "once-in-a-century credit tsunami" and he found a "fault" in his governing ideology and that has led him to re-examine his thinking. The America economy is rapidly descending from a recession into a depression. Hundreds of thousands of workers are losing their jobs each month. One out of five
  • 17. workers is out of work or working part time; one out of every ten homeowners cannot meet their mortgage payments and face eviction. The Gross National Product (GNP) will be retreating at a rate between minus 2% to minus 5% for 2009; manufacturing is declining to minus 6%; consumer spending is down 25%. Bankruptcy rates are at depression levels and credit is drying up. Major of the banks survive only because of the trillion dollar government bail-outs. Issues like unemployment, bankruptcy, credit freeze, corporate losses and debt has devastated the domestic America economy and severely damaged the 'real economy' and stock market. The Obama administration will need to take more radical measures to ensure that the much needed credit to businesses and consumers starts flowing again, including nationalization and recapitalization of major banks and speed up recovery on ordinary Americans in terms of job losses, home foreclosures and loss of other basic supplies of life. However, the fate of many new-comers from the emerging economies of the world is closely tied to the success or failure of capitalism in America like Brazil and India, who hold the conservative American ideas of "economic reform" and "deregulation". The European and Asian nations with substantial population of savers and entrepreneurs will recover rapidly and flourish again, as long as they keep their banks and financial institutions on a tight leash. America was faced three interrelated crises which were economic recession, energy insecurity and the overarching climate crisis. Sustainable capitalism is needed to build the long-term value creation.