Social equality
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Social_equality"
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content
Rights
Theoretical Distinctions
Conceptual Distinctions
Claim rights and liberty rights
Individual rights and Group rights
Natural rights and Legal rights
Negative and positive rights
Substantial Distinctions
Civil and political rights and
Economic, social and cultural rights
Three generations of human rights
Areas of Concern
Particular Groups
Animal rights and Human rights
Children's rights and Youth rights
Fathers' rights and Mothers' rights
Men's rights and Women's rights
Particular Rights
Labor rights
LGBT rights
Reproductive rights
Right of self-defense



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Social equality is a social state of affairs in which all people within a specific society or isolated group have the same status in a certain respect. At the very least, social equality includes equal rights under the law, such as security, voting rights, freedom of speech and assembly, and the extent of property rights. However, it also includes access to education, health care and other social securities. It also includes equal opportunities and obligations, and so involves the whole society.

Social equality requires the lack of legally enforced social class or caste boundaries and the lack of unjustified discrimination motivated by an inalienable part of a person's identity. For example, gender, age, origin, caste or class, income or property, language, religion, convictions, opinions, health or disability must not result in unequal treatment under the law and should not reduce opportunities unjustifiably.

Social equality, however, does not require communism or income equality. "Equal opportunities" is interpreted as being judged by ability, which is compatible with a free-market economy. A problem is horizontal inequality, the inequality of two persons of same origin and ability.

Perfect social equality is an ideal situation that does, for various reasons, not exist in any society in the world today. The reasons for this are widely debated. Reasons cited for social inequality include commonly economics, immigration/emigration, foreign politics and national politics. Also, in complexity economics, it has been found that horizontal inequality arises in complex systems.

A counterexample to social equality was the social inequality of the medieval Europe, where a person's estate, which was usually inherited, determined the legal and social rights the person had. For example, clergy could claim the benefit of clergy to receive a more letient punishment for a crime.

See also

References

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