The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948, outlines 30 rights and freedoms that belong to all human beings and that nobody can take away from them. These rights are the same for every person, regardless of their country or background. Here is the full list of the 30 human rights according to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
- Right to equality
- Freedom from discrimination
- Right to life, liberty, and personal security
- Freedom from slavery
- Freedom from torture and degrading treatment
- Right to recognition as a person before the law
- Right to equality before the law
- Right to remedy by competent tribunal
- Freedom from arbitrary arrest and exile
- Right to fair public hearing
- Right to be considered innocent until proven guilty
- Freedom from interference with privacy, family, home, and correspondence
- Right to free movement in and out of the country
- Right to asylum in other countries from persecution
- Right to a nationality and the freedom to change it
- Right to marriage and family
- Right to own property
- Freedom of thought, conscience, and religion
- Freedom of opinion and expression
- Right to peaceful assembly and association
- Right to participate in government and free elections
- Right to social security
- Right to work and to equal pay for equal work
- Right to rest and leisure
- Right to an adequate standard of living
- Right to education
- Right to participate in the cultural life of the community
- Right to a fair and free world
- Duty to the community
- Freedom from state or personal interference in the above rights
These rights are interdependent and indivisible, and nobody can decide that some are more important than others.