| Charter Of Fundamental Rights Of The European Union |
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| european union law | |
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ORIGIN The 1996 ). After this, the aforementioned three institutions of the European Union (Council, Commission, and Parliament) decided that the Charter is the appropriate format (for the moment) of presenting the fundamental principles of human rights for the Union. STATUS As it stands, the Charter is not a Treaty , Constitutional , or Legal document, and has the ambiguous value of a 'solemn proclamation' by three of the Union's most important institutions. Its text is mainly in harmony with the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights and the European Convention On Human Rights , and therefore can be taken as a confirmation (by the Council, Commission, and Parliament) of the pre-existing rights contained therein, while adding widely-accepted principles such as the 'right' to good administration, workers' social rights, and bioethics. The Charter's "power" or "effect", if it has any, may be only these:
It does not have the status of Community Law . Therefore, cases cannot be brought solely on the ground of a contradiction against the Charter. As part of the proposed Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe Part II of the proposed European Constitution , which was signed in October 2004 but which failed to be Ratified after Referendum defeats in France and Holland , contained a version of the Charter. The intention was to enable the European Union to accede to the European Convention On Human Rights , thus enabling the European Court Of Justice to rule on the basis of this Charter. NOTABLE PROVISIONS The Charter is organized into 6 titles: Dignity , Freedoms , Equality , solidarity, Citizens' Rights , and Justice . The second, third, and fourth rubrics reflect the Three Generations Of Human Rights after Karel Vasak .
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