In the context of human rights, there is often talk about so-called "group

In the context of human rights, there is often talk about so-called "group

In the context of human rights, there is often talk about so-called "group rights." One such group right is the right to protection against genocide - i.e., against mass murder. Why is a "group right" necessary in such cases? If one accepts the validity of human rights at all, then one almost certainly accepts that all individuals, including all members of a minority group, have the right to life. Why provide an additional group right against genocide? Anyone committing genocide is necessarily and directly infringing upon the right to life. What is gained by formulating extra group rights, besides an additional offence to add to the records of human rights offenders? Other "group rights" are also, or could easily be, covered by individual rights (right to speak the language of one's choice, right to teach one's children the language and culture of one's choice, etc.). Groups, unlike the individuals that make up the group, cannot be said to suffer at all unless their constituent individuals suffer, whereas individuals can suffer regardless of the well-being of their group - and the well-being of the group (or the race, or the majority, or society, or a particular class) has often been the justification for atrocities in the past. Considering all this, what is the advantage of formulating such a thing as group rights?

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