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Hennessey, John - Hennessey Law Firm
(305) 373-8224
25 Se 2nd Ave, Miami, FL
Pecoraro, Joseph J - Law Firm of Joseph J Pecoraro
(305) 371-4726
155 S Miami Ave, Miami, FL
Joffe, David J - David J Joffee Pa Law Firm
(305) 579-0048
1 Ne 2nd Ave, Miami, FL
Kleinfeld, Denis - Kleinfeld Law Firm
(305) 375-9515
1 Se 3rd Ave Ste 1940, Miami, FL
MacDaniel, John M - John M MacDaniel Law Firm
(305) 374-0700
2 S Biscayne Blvd Ste 2670, Miami, FL |
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In modern English and European systems of jurisprudence and law, a right is the legal or moral entitlement to do or refrain from doing something or to obtain or refrain from obtaining an action, thing or recognition in civil society. Compare with privilege.
Generally speaking (within the English and European systems) a right corresponds with a complementary obligation that others have on the same object or realm; for instance if someone has a right on a thing, simultaneously another party or parties have an obligation to do something (or to abstain from doing something) in order to respect that right or to give concrete execution to that right. Property rights provide a good example: society recognizes that individuals have title to particular property as defined by the transaction by which they acquired the property granting the individual free use and possession of the property. In many cases, especially regarding ideological and similar rights, the obligation depends on the legal system in its entirety, or on the state, or on the generical universality of other subjects submitted to the law.
The right can therefore be a faculty of doing something, of omitting or refusing to do something or of claiming something. Some interpretations express a typical form of right in the faculty of using something, and this is more often related to the right of property. The faculty (in all the above mentioned senses) can be originated by a (generical or specific) law, or by a private contract (which is sometimes exactly defined as a specific law between or among volunteer parties).
Other interpretations consider the right as a sort of freedom of something or as the object of justice. One of the definitions of justice is in fact the obligation that the legal system has toward the individual or toward the collectivity to grant respect or execution to his/her/its right, ordinarily with no need of explicit claim.
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