Substantive rights
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Substantive rights are basic human rights possessed by people in an ordered society and include rights granted by natural law as well as the substantive law. Substantive rights involve a right to the substance of being human (life, liberty, happiness), rather than a right to a procedure to enforce that right, which is defined by procedural law. Substantive rights are contrasted with procedural rights, which are purely formal 'rules' of law that only prescribes how a law ought to be enforced, rather than defining the contents of a law.
See also[]
- Procedural rights
- Substantive equality
References[]
Categories:
- Rights
- Human rights by issue
- Human rights stubs