Library/PT 145/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

In 1948 the United Nations approved the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), the first worldwide statement saying everyone should have basic human rights. The 1945 UN Charter had mentioned human rights, but many people thought it was too weak and wanted rules that would force countries to act; those stronger ideas were not adopted, so the UDHR was created instead. From 1946 to 1948 the UN worked through a long drafting process and agreed on 30 short articles that say things like equality, freedom, and rights to work, rest, and education. The UDHR is not legally binding, but it inspired later binding treaties and still serves as an important international standard and moral guide.

Logic Breakdown

Focus on statements about proponents' desired obligations for member states and the author's view of the UDHR's legal force; the correct answer links proponents' intentions to the UDHR's nonbinding status.

Passage Stimulus

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5.

The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
E
Choice E is correct. The passage says critics "proposed that member states be required 'to take separate and joint action and to co-operate with the organization for the promotion of human rights.' This would have implied an obligation for member states to act on human rights issues," showing that staunch proponents wanted binding obligations. The author also calls the UDHR's "most regrettable" weakness "its nonbinding legal status" and says the UDHR "remains a resolution of a purely programmatic nature." These statements together support the claim that the UDHR would be truer to its staunchest proponents' intentions if UN members were legally required to abide by it.
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