and forces. On the other hand, these rights apply to the situation of subjects and those
who are in the territory of the state. These rights lawyer shared the rights of purely
political and civil-political, but this division is characteristic only for constitutional
states. Political rights include the rights of citizens to participate in the political life of
the state, that is, to participate in the creation of laws, the management of public affairs,
the approval of public incomes and expenditures, the monitoring of government
actions, means and types of surveillance and the use of political rights itself, that is, in
methods of assembling, petitions, elections, representations, etc.
Civil-political rights concern the situation of individuals in the state and constitute
a more or less necessary condition of belonging to this state. This includes the right of
permanent residence, the right of naturalization, the right of religion and worship, the
right to form associations, etc. [9, p.149-150].
As for rights arising from customary laws, they apply to all other relations of
citizens not defined by the basic laws. Rights can be common with two conditions:
either they belong to all persons who occupy the known territory or are accessible to
everyone with known conditions. Special rights refer to persons who have special
characteristics and require special definition. Emergency rights are created exclusively
by laws, owing to the special provisions of society that go beyond the normal order.
They are established for the highest state objectives, are provided not to private persons
but to public authorities and their agencies and are important for interim measures.
Privileges are the exclusive rights granted to certain persons and related to a
known subject with a known person or a category of persons. Separate law is a one-
time exclusion from a general rule that has force for a particular one. A specific case;
being an absolutely private exception, although based on the law, ends with a private
incident and cannot serve as the basis for other similar rights. The second criterion for
the classification of law lawyer chose the content of law. In accordance with this
criterion, rights are divided into personal, property and power rights.
M. K. Rennenkampf called “personal right” each right, which is related to the
concept of a person, a certain personality. The rights of the individual, in the opinion
of the scientist, are only consequences, the further development of the concept of legal
capacity and in this way relate mainly to private law; partly contained in the rights of
a person as a citizen, a member of a variety of government spheres, and belong to the
public right.
Lawyer considered personal rights the basis of all rights, because the person is the
starting point and purpose of law and they belong to a person without any actions on
its part and without recognition of their norms of law; with the exception of certain
private derivatives, such as the right to citizenship. But the rights of the private can
only be based on positive law and absolute in the sense that they have power in relation
to all persons.
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