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Citizenship and Political Rights

Political rights refer to an individual's ability to participate in the civil and political life of the society and state without fear of discrimination or repression, and is tied closely to citizenship status. Such rights include not only the right to vote in an election, but also the rights to join a political party; run for office; and participate freely in political rallies, events, or protests.

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Reform and Human Rights in Eastern Europe

Parliamentary Diplomacy

The State of Human Rights in Turkey: An Update

Report: Northern Ireland: Codel DeConcini Trip Report

Azerbaijan’s Constitutional Referendum Creates Crisis of Legitimacy

Reform and Human Rights - The Gorbachev Record

The State of Human Rights in Romania: An Update

The Moscow Meeting of the Conference on the Human Dimension of the CSCE

Revolt Against the Silence - The State of Human Rights in Romania: An Update

A Changing Soviet Society

Report: Russians in Estonia: Problems and Prospects

The Miroslav Medvid Incident

Baltic Tribunal Against the Soviet Union

Implementation Of The Helsinki Accords Vol. VI – Soviet Law And Helsinki Monitors

Implementation of the Helsinki Accords Vol. V – The Right to Citizenship in the Soviet Union

Implementation of The Helsinki Accords Vol. X – Aleksandr Ginzburg On The Human Rights Situation In The U.S.S.R.

Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union

Implementation of the Helsinki Accords Vol. IX – U.S. Visa Policies

Human Rights in Czechoslovakia: The Documents of Charter '77, 1977-1982

Implementation of The Helsinki Accords Vol. XI – Religious Persecution In U.S.S.R. & HR Violations in Ukraine

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