Citizenship and Res Publica : The Emergence of Republican Rights
Title:
Citizenship and Res Publica : The Emergence of Republican Rights
Author:
Bresser-Pereira, Luiz Carlos
Appeared in:
Citizenship studies
Paging:
Volume 6 (2002) nr. 2 pages 145-164
Year:
2002-07-01
Contents:
A fourth kind of citizens' rights--the republican rights--are being recognized and enforced in the last quarter of the twentieth century, after the civil, political, and social rights have been defined. Republican rights are the rights that every citizen has that the public patrimony, the res publica , is utilized on behalf of the public interest. While civil rights protect citizens against a powerful state, republican rights protect the state against powerful citizens involved in several forms of rent-seeking. Three major types of republican rights are identified: rights to the environment, to the historical patrimony, and to the economic patrimony. The last, in flow terms, corresponds to the state's revenues, which are permanently threatened by businessmen, bureaucrats, and all kinds of special interest groups, sometimes in subtle ways. To identify and contain these threats is a major challenge for modern institutions and law systems.