the citizens
It depends on the legislation of the country concerned.
c. as long as that person does not infringe on the rights of others
well, if youre asking about a country, then specify which one; but in all the earth the answer should be very important :)
Constitutiional rights are defined as those rights found in the U.S. Constitution and in the Bill of Rights.Constitutional rights are extended to any person physically in the United States. There are some exceptions. For example, a person from another country can be deported to that country for specific reasons including criminal activities.
A person who has the right to live in a country is called a citizen or a resident, depending on their legal status and rights granted by the country's laws.
nothing nothing at ALL!
Human rights exist in every country in the world. They are human rights after all and not humans of a country rights. In Syria, however, these rights are violated because of the demonstrations against the current administration.
A person who is a member of a particular country and who has rights because of being born there or because of being given rights, or a person who lives in a particular town or city.
Civil rights vary from country to country - although there is a Declaration of Human Rights (from the United Nations) - and so all 'rights' are derived from the society a person lives in. We give each other these rights to make community living easier and to help in formulating laws and punishments. (OR for a short answer, The Bill of Rights)
A country's human rights are typically stipulated in its constitution or in international human rights treaties and conventions that the country has ratified.
At 18 a person is an adult and has all the rights of adulthood.
Any constitutional rights... as a matter of fact no rights at all!