Introduction of human violation during 1950 to 1960
Answers
Explanation:
The modern human rights movement was born in the 1960s, though the roots of some contemporary organizations extend further back in time. Human rights groups have always seen themselves as advocates, but only in the largest sense did they commence their work with a focus on policy issues. As early as 1927(opens in a new tab) the Paris-based International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) proposed an international declaration of human rights, and in the 1930s it advocated a bill of social rights. These efforts –and the FIDH itself — were eclipsed by the events of World War II, however. When human rights advocates resumed their work in the 1950s, the inclination was to focus energies on particular situations and particular individuals. (During this period the FIDH as well as the newly founded(opens in a new tab) International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) pioneered the work of international trial observations and investigative human rights missions.)