Human Rights and Migrations: the exercise of solidarity and empathy as a perspective of a citizen state

Abstract

This text makes a cut of the master's dissertation on Human Rights and discusses the relations between human rights and current migrations. The research, of a qualitative character, is carried out through the hypothetical-deductive method, and reflects on how the right to solidarity and empathy can be considered essential for the effectiveness of human rights in relation to migrations. The hypothesis is that from an effective citizen state the solidarity and empathy in society are created and conditions are established to establish mutual respect among the citizens. It defends the right to migrate as a natural and originating right, embracing the interculturality and the contact of the peoples, denouncing the criminalization of the being

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