Human rights questions at Saha Sachib level require more than naming rights. You must explain state obligations, institutions, remedies, vulnerable groups and rights-based administration.

Core Definitions

Human Rights

Standard definition: Universal, inherent and inalienable rights belonging to all human beings by virtue of being human.

Exam meaning: मानिस भएकै आधारमा प्राप्त सार्वभौम, जन्मसिद्ध र अहरणीय अधिकार।

Rights-Based Approach

Standard definition: A governance approach that treats citizens as rights-holders and the state as duty-bearer with obligations of respect, protection and fulfillment.

Exam meaning: नागरिकलाई अधिकारधारी र राज्यलाई कर्तव्यधारी मानेर नीति/सेवा चलाउने approach।

Remedy

Standard definition: A legal or administrative means to correct rights violations or provide relief.

Exam meaning: अधिकार उल्लंघन हुँदा सुधार, राहत वा न्याय दिने व्यवस्था।

Conceptual Depth

Human rights convert moral claims into legal and administrative obligations. Public administration must respect rights by not violating them, protect rights by preventing third-party harm and fulfill rights through policies, budgets and services.

Human Rights Principles

Principles guide rights-based governance.

  • Universality: rights apply to all people.
  • Inalienability: rights cannot be taken away arbitrarily.
  • Indivisibility: civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights are connected.
  • Equality and non-discrimination: services must be fair and inclusive.
  • Participation: people should influence decisions affecting rights.
  • Accountability: duty-bearers must answer for rights failures.

State Obligations

This is the most useful analytical tool.

Obligation Meaning Example
Respect Do not violate rights Avoid arbitrary arrest/discrimination
Protect Prevent others from violating rights Regulate labour, violence, exploitation
Fulfill Take positive measures Education, health, social security
Remedy Correct violation Court, commission, grievance, compensation

Institutions and Mechanisms

Rights are protected through multiple mechanisms.

  • Constitution and laws define rights and remedies.
  • Courts provide judicial protection and review.
  • National human rights institutions monitor and recommend.
  • Parliament and committees oversee policy and rights issues.
  • Administrative grievance systems solve service-level violations.
  • Civil society and media support awareness and accountability.

Analytical Framework

  • Right: Which right is affected?
  • Rights-holder: Which individual/group is vulnerable?
  • Duty-bearer: Which institution has responsibility?
  • Obligation: Respect, protect, fulfill or remedy?
  • Barrier: Law, budget, discrimination, access, information or capacity?
  • Remedy: What correction mechanism exists?
  • Indicator: How will rights improvement be measured?

Nepal-Specific Application

  • Human rights in Nepal connect with conflict legacy, transitional justice, inclusion, gender, caste, disability, labour migration and service access.
  • Federalism creates rights duties across all levels of government.
  • Economic and social rights require progressive realization through budget and institutions.
  • Administrative discrimination can become rights violation in service delivery.
  • Rights-based planning requires data on vulnerable groups.
Rights Issue Administrative Duty Implementation Challenge
Non-discrimination Equal service standards Hidden bias and access barriers
Social security Identification and delivery Targeting and leakage
Education/health Budget and quality services Capacity and geography
Labour migration Protection and information Cross-border vulnerability
Access to justice Remedy mechanisms Cost, delay and awareness

Exam Point

  • Use respect-protect-fulfill-remedy framework.
  • Mention rights-holder and duty-bearer language.
  • Connect rights with budget, service delivery and grievance systems.
  • Avoid only article listing.

25-Mark Answer Structure

  • Define human rights.
  • Explain principles and state obligations.
  • Discuss institutions and mechanisms.
  • Apply to Nepal’s vulnerable groups and federal context.
  • Analyze implementation gaps.
  • Recommend rights-based administration.

Model Argument

Human rights become real when public administration changes how it plans, budgets and delivers services. Rights are not only courtroom claims; they are everyday standards for fair treatment, access, inclusion and remedy.

Diagrams and Tables To Practice

  • Rights-holder/duty-bearer model.
  • Respect-protect-fulfill-remedy table.
  • Rights-based policy cycle.
  • Vulnerability-barrier-remedy matrix.

Common Mistakes

  • Listing rights without obligations.
  • No vulnerable-group analysis.
  • Ignoring remedy mechanisms.
  • Treating human rights as only civil/political rights.

Revision Questions

  • What are state obligations in human rights?
  • What is rights-based approach?
  • How can public administration violate rights?
  • Why are economic and social rights implementation-heavy?

Summary

  • Human rights are universal and enforceable claims.
  • State has duties to respect, protect, fulfill and remedy.
  • Rights-based administration focuses on inclusion, access and accountability.
  • Nepal needs rights implementation through federal service systems.