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Universal Declaration of Human Rights
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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is an international document adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on December 10, 1948, which enshrines the rights and freedoms of all human beings. The Declaration consists of 30 articles and affirms that all humans are born free and equal in dignity and rights, regardless of nationality, sex, or any other status. It has directly inspired the development of international human rights law and has been influential in shaping legal, political, and social developments on both the global and national levels.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.Russia-Ukraine War
- 2.Espionage
- 3.Russian Politics
- 4.US Foreign Policy
- 5.Russian Foreign Policy
- 6.Freedom of the press
- 7.US-Russia Relations
- 8.News media
- 9.Poland under Donald Tusk
- 10.Right of asylum
- 11.Immigration to Europe
- 12.Immigration
countries
- 1.Russian Federation
- 2.Ukraine
- 3.United States
- 4.Germany
- 5.Belarus
- 6.Afghanistan
- 7.Syrian Arab Republic
- 8.Poland
- 9.Latvia
- 10.Lithuania
- 11.Iraq
- 12.Czechia
organizations
- 1.United Nations
- 2.Kremlin
- 3.UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
- 4.Central Intelligence Agency
- 5.US State Department
- 6.Poland 2050
- 7.People's Action Party
- 8.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 9.Law and Justice party
- 10.Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies
- 11.Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights
- 12.European Union
persons
- 1.Matthew Gillett
- 2.Ivan Nechepurenko
- 3.Almar Latour
- 4.Evan Gershkovich
- 5.Vladimir Putin
- 6.Radosław Sikorski
- 7.Marysia Zlonkiewicz
- 8.Malgorzata Szuleka
- 9.Donald Tusk
- 10.Alexander Lukashenko