Democracy and philosophy of subjective rights

Main Article Content

soumya Heireche
Mohamed Haddad

Abstract

The philosophical conception of the history of democracy, after the intellectual, scientific, religious and political lights movement that Europe witnessed from the beginning of the Renaissance and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, has been associated with the idea of the universalism of the human being as an ontological value, and as a philosophical conception and an individual tendency that formed the doctrine of democracy based on the sovereignty of the individual And his absolute freedom, considering the individual as a subject of the right. This organic link between democracy and the individual has been embodied at the level of political, economic and individual freedom in addition to defining its contractual relations of the individual with the state based on the recognition of such rights.
Keywords: Philosophy; right; democracy; the individuals; Law.

Article Details

How to Cite
Heireche , soumya, & Haddad , M. (2022). Democracy and philosophy of subjective rights. Social and Human Science Studies, 11(02), 721 - 728. https://doi.org/10.46315/1714-011-002-050
Section
Articles

References

Audard, Catherine (2009). Qu'est-ce que le libéralisme? Ethique, politique, société: Gallimard . Paris.
Blondiaux, Loic. (2008). Le nouvel esprirt de la démocratie; Actualité de la démocratie participative. Paris: Seuil.
Colliot-Thélène, Catherine (2011). La démocratie sans demos: PUF : Paris.
Debbasch, C., Bourdon, J., Pontier, J. Ricci, J. (1986). Droit Constitutionnel et institutions politiques : Economica :Paris.
Durand, Pascal., Lits, . Mrc.(2005). Peuple, populaire, populisme: Hermès: Cnrs: Paris.
Kamel, . Fouad. (1991). The Individual in the Philosophy of Chopenhour: The Egyptian General Book Authority: Cairo.
Nay, . Olivier. (2016). Histoire des idée politique : Armand Colin : Rouen.
Prélot, M., & Lescuyer, G. (1997). Histoire des idées politique. :Dalloz : Paris.
Schaar, J. H. (1989). Legitimacy in the Modern State. Oxford University Press: Englan.