There is no generally agreed legal definition of the right. Based on
Tony Honoré, Murphy suggests that the "'right to resist' is the right, given certain conditions, to take action intended to effect social, political or economic change, including in some instances a right to commit acts that would ordinarily be unlawful". This right could be exercised individually or collectively, ranges from overthrow of the system through more limited goals, and encompasses all illegal actions from civil disobedience to violent resistance. This right is conditional on being necessary and proportionate to achieve an aim compatible with international human rights law, and could not justify infringing others' rights.
International law In international law, the right to resist is closely related to the principle of
self-determination. It is widely recognized that a right to self-determination arises in situations of colonial domination, foreign occupation, and racist regimes that deny a segment of the population political participation. According to international law, states may not use force against the lawful exercise of self-determination, while those seeking self-determination may use military force if there is no other way to achieve their goals.
Fayez Sayegh derives a right to resist from the
Charter of the United Nations' recognition of an inherent right of national self-defense in the face of aggression. Based on the charter, the 1970
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2625 explicitly endorsed a right to resist "subjection of peoples to alien subjugation, domination and exploitation". Based on this, many scholars argue that the right to resist exists in
customary international law where self-determination is at issue. Some scholars have argued that a right to resist oppression is implicit in the
International Bill of Human Rights. The preamble to the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights states "whereas it is essential, if man is not to be compelled to have recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion against tyranny and oppression, that human rights should be protected by the rule of law". The drafters of the declaration, however, intended to exclude the right to resist. The European and Inter-American regional human rights treaties do not include a right to resist. Article 20(2) of the
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights states that "colonised or oppressed peoples" have a right "to free themselves from the bonds of domination by resorting to any means recognised by the international community". There is no similar provision in other human rights treaties. Murphy suggests that besides foreign invasion and occupation, "peoples facing massive violations amounting to crimes against humanity or genocide, coups d'état or other unconstitutional rule could qualify." The revised 2004
Arab Charter on Human Rights, but not its 1994 predecessor, grants an unqualified "right to resist foreign occupation".
Constitutions The right to resist was granted by the
Magna Carta and is one of the central elements of the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen issued during the
French Revolution in 1791. This provision is incorporated into the preamble of
France's 1958 constitution. As of 2012, 42 countries recognize a right to resist in their constitution and another three formerly recognized such a right. Most of these countries are located in
Latin America,
Western Europe, or Africa. Most provisions were adopted in four waves: "revolutionary republican, post-fascist, post-colonial and post-Soviet". In Latin America, such constitutional provisions were commonly adopted in the aftermath of
coups d'état, while elsewhere these provisions were intended as a forward thinking measure against
democratic backsliding. The philosophical basis of the constitutional right to resist differs; in some cases based on
natural law; in others obliging the citizen to take action against unconstitutional seizure of power; and in a third set of countries authorizing action against state interference in individual rights. There is also variance in whether the right to resist is conceived as optional or a duty of citizens. The laws vary in scope; some grant the right to resist an unlawful coup or foreign aggression while others are more broad, encompassing human rights violations or other oppression. Constitutional right to resist installed by revolutionary governments may later be cited by opponents of these regimes. In 1953,
Fidel Castro was arrested for the
attack on Moncada Barracks. In his defense speech, "
History Will Absolve Me", he invoked the "universally recognized principle" and Cuba's constitutional right to resist. The right of resistance granted in Article 20 Paragraph 4 of the
Basic Law is part of the
liberal democratic basic order of the
Federal Republic of Germany and is considered a right that is equivalent to a
fundamental right. This right was introduced as part of the 1968
German Emergency Acts and allows any
German to resist anyone who undertakes to abolish the constitutional principles (Article 1-20
GG) when no other remedy is possible. Above all, it is directed against
constitutional institutions themselves, which try to abolish the existing constitutional order through political decisions. This is based on the knowledge that
constitutional institutions can behave
unconstitutionally, even if they act on the basis of a law (
Nazi seizure of power through the
Enabling Act of 1933). The right of resistance is the result of a
long historical development, which, based on an
absolutist or legal
positivist background, assumed that state action could never be wrong: "The King can do no wrong". Any
criminal offenses committed and other violations of rights are justified by the right of resistance. However, the resister must always use the mildest means, if this is possible for him. Such a constitutional regulation is not very widespread worldwide. In 2021, the Italian
Supreme Court of Cassation overturned the conviction of two migrants in the
Vos Thalassa case for a July 2018 protest on board the
Vos Thalassa ship in which they resisted being returned to Libya, due to the risk of torture and mistreatment in that country. ==References==