Inglês, perguntado por jacianedesasena1128, 1 ano atrás

linha do tempo sobre a violação dos direitos humanos durante a segunda guerra mundial
De preferencia que esteja em ingles.
Me ajudempor favor

Soluções para a tarefa

Respondido por playerALAN
0
Building Human Rights - Timeline Discussions on Human Rights began a long time ago and continue to the present day. Check below a timeline with the main world-wide aspects related to the theme. XVIII - The principles and claims that constitute the "roots" of the concept are formulated. 1789 - The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of the French Revolution did not regard women as possessing the same rights as men and opened the way for the Proclamation of the Republic; Soon after, the First Generation Rights, which consecrate civil liberties and political rights, are organized. They are called "Rights of Freedom". 1848 - The revolutionary movements succeeded in achieving, for the first time, the concept of "social rights" in the French Constitution, although in an incipient and ambiguous way. 1894 - The "social doctrine of the church" begins with Pope Leo XIII, who, with his Encyclical Rerum Novarum of 1894, changed the hostility of the Catholic Church to modern human rights; Social, economic, and cultural rights, called Second Generation Rights or Equality Rights, begin to be included in the Constitutions: 1917 - They are included in the Mexican Constitution; 1918 - Included in the Russian Constitution; 1919 - Included in the Constitution of the Weimar Republic; 1934 - In Uruguay, they are incorporated into the Constitution. 1945 - After the horror of World War II, 51 countries sign the Founding Charter of the United Nations, which proclaims "faith in the fundamental rights of man, in the dignity and worth of the human person." 1945 - After World War II social rights began to be placed in the Constitutional Letters and put into practice in the capitalist (mainly European) countries and guaranteeing a series of social achievements in the socialist countries. 1948 - On December 10 in Paris, the United Nations proclaims the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Human rights thus risk becoming a "single thought" that justifies a "politically correct" single practice, leveling the differences and divergences . 1966 - The rights of this second generation are contained in the "International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights," signed by the UN; 1966 - The pact of Civil and Political Rights is approved; The stage of formulation of the Rights of Peoples, which constitute the Third Generation of Human Rights. 1976 - At the Algiers Conference, a group of countries from the underdeveloped world proclaimed the Declaration of the Rights of Peoples. In it, they propose the search for a "new international political and economic order" in a context in which effective respect for human rights can be achieved. " 1979 - Pope John Paul II, in his Encyclical Redemptor Hominis, recognizes the role of the United Nations in defending the "objectives and inviolable rights of man". 1984 - The conclusions of the "Symposium of Experts on the Rights of Solidarity and Rights of Peoples" convened by UNESCO in San Marino; are added the Declaration of the Rights of Peoples; 1993 - The Declaration for a World Ethic, promoted by the Parliament of World Religions in Chicago, which draws on the work of some ecumenical theologians, such as Hans Küng, who proclaim the centrality of individual and social human rights;
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