Every child has a right
Enter3

Education is the key to life . . . Before exams the best thing to do is to correct the mistakes you made the first time

Cool Writer
Confirmed, it’s tough being a teenager.
You’re living at home under your parents’ thumb. You have no money, no education – no real self-sufficiency at all. You can’t even see certain movies without an adult with you. So, when it comes to the law, what rights does the average child or teenager have?

If you think the answer’s ‘none,’ prepare to think again.

Under the law, children in Zimbabwe are fully formed human beings and there have their basic constitutional rights that adults enjoy too.

Like every other citizen, children have the right to due process under the law and the right to counsel.

They’re also protected against cruel and unusual punishment and unreasonable searches and seizures.

However, the law also recognises that children aren’t physically and emotionally mature enough to handle the responsibility attached to legal activities like drinking, let alone the right to vote or run for public office.

The law reconciles these two ideas by implementing ages of majority designed to define when a person has the ability to exercise his or her rights responsibly.

These usually vary by state, but they govern everything from the right to drive to the right to marry.

There are some exceptions, however.

In the juvenile justice system, for example, children don’t receive bail, nor are they tried by juries of their peers. Juveniles do have the right to seek legal counsel if there’s a chance that they could be tried as adults, as well as the right to a hearing before a judge.

 

You Might Also Like

Comments

Take our Survey

We value your opinion! Take a moment to complete our survey