Abstract

This study aims to examine the difficult trajectory of human rights and the importance of standardization in contemporary times in light of historical events. The human rights achieved are not static, they are born gradually, and historically characterized by hard fights. So, the man being social, attributes a portion of his freedom to coexist in society and from this agreement they choose the one who will be the trustee and administrator of their lives, and this one with often dictatorial powers, impose an unbearable burden on the oppressed that ends in hard fights. These struggles culminated in important historical events, principally the Declaration of Independence and American Constitution, Declaration of Man and Citizen of France, important events for man's history, but not enough to recognize his dignity, because man remains a slave, without rights, without a political voice. The most importabt, it was post second World War, the holocaust, the atomic bombs dropped on the city of Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan, the creation of the United Nations and the Nuremberg Court, leading the human being to standardize universal human rights.

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