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HOW EFFECTIVE ARE BILLS OF RIGHTS IN PROTECTING INDIVIDUAL FREEDOMS?

NCJ Number
141382
Journal
Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy Volume: 15 Issue: 1 Dated: (Winter 1992) Pages: 53-55
Author(s)
T B Olson
Date Published
1992
Length
3 pages
Annotation
A few examples are cited to illustrate that bills of rights may exist throughout the world yet fail to provide the same protection of individual liberties that citizens of the United States enjoy.
Abstract
The examples of bills of rights cited serve to introduce a panel that attempts to determine what makes a bill of rights effective and how effective can a bill of rights be at protecting freedom and civil liberties. Countries other than the United States have bills of rights, but, in practice, these documents often neglect their purported goals. Cambodia's bill of rights, for example, guarantees among other rights the freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of assembly and protects individual Cambodian citizens from physical violation. In practice, the rights ostensibly guaranteed by this document have not been guaranteed. 16 footnotes

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