22. Freedom of association, right to form and join trade unions. No restrictions other than those imposed by law necessary to protect national security/public safety, public order, health, morals or rights/freedoms of others. Difference between the freedom of assembly and freedom of association. Assembly freedom to organise meetings, express opinions, etc. Association freedom to make unions, groups etc. 23. Protection of family. Right of men and women of marriageable age to marry and form a family. Equality of spouses. 24. Every child has without discrimination right to protection required by his status as a minor, part of his family, society and state. Child shall be registered immediately after birth, shall have a name. right to acquire nationality. 25. Right and opportunity to take part in the conduct of public affairs, to vote and be elected at genuine elections, to have access to public services. 26
succeed in christening her, for I have not the standing or authority to do so. (The U.S. Navy has explicit rules for appointing the dignitaries who christen 150 Pragmatics and speech acts battleships. There is also the fact that the North Carolina has been christened already, on 12 June 1940.)4 If a clergyman utters (2) to a young couple stand- ing before him in a Chicago chapel, but is not licensed to perform marriages in the state of Illinois, or if one of the couple is not of legally marriageable age, the wedding does not succeed (indeed is not a wedding at all, despite the organ music, rings, and rice). To raise someone five by uttering (6), I have to be playing poker at the time, and five has to be within the agreed-upon betting limit. Violation of a merely regulative rule is less grave. If I utter a sentence intending to perform a speech act of type A, and violate no constitutive rules but do violate some regulative rule, the result is that I do perform an act