Common Law

Brighton & Hove Community Co-op’s Lawful Standing

Have you ever found yourself in difficult situations where you feel something is not right but are too fearful to speak out? 

Are you aware that you have more lawful rights and powers than you have been educated to believe?

Through Brighton and Hove Community Co-operative we aim to support and help educate  our members in natural law and unalienable rights, so that we have more empowerment in situations where corporations and their polices encroach on our freedoms and right to live peacefully. 

Do no harm and cause no loss are the two fundamental values of natural law mirrored in common law. Brighton and Hove Community Cooperative uphold these values, alongside our unalienable rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This applies to all men and women and can never be taken away or denied.

We value what is lawful, not what is ‘legal’. Corporations that impose legalities hold no power against our unalienable rights and our right to informed consent.

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Our Unalienable Rights

  • The right to life, freedom, health and the pursuit of happiness

  • The right to contract, or not to contract, which is unlimited.

  • The right to earn a living by being compensated with wages, a salary, or any goods, in fair exchange for ones work.

  • The right to travel in the ordinary course of ones life and business.

  • The right to privacy and confidentiality, free from unwarranted invasion.

  • The right to control, and hold ones property, lawfully, without trespass.

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  • The right to self-defence when threatened with harm, loss, or deceit.

  • The right to due process of law, with notice and opportunity to defend.

  • The right to be presumed innocent, suffering no detention or arrest, no search or seizure, without reasonable cause.

  • The right to remain silent when accused, to avoid self-incrimination.

  • The right to equality in the eyes of the law, and to equal representation.

  • The right to trial by jury, being and impartial panel of ones peers.

  • The right to appeal in law against conviction of sentence, or both.

  • The right to expose knowledge necessary to ones rights and freedoms

  • The right to peaceful association, assembly, expression, and protest.

  • The right to practice a religion, and to have beliefs, of ones choosing

  • The right to love, and to consensual marriage with children, as a family

  • The right to security from abuse, persecution, tyranny, and war.

  • The right to live in peace and to be left alone when law-abiding.

What is the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights?

A summary of the 30 articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Article 1: We are all born free. We all have our own thoughts and ideas and we should all be treated the same way.

Article 2: The rights in the UDHR belong to everyone, no matter who we are, where we’re from, or whatever we believe.

Article 3: We all have the right to life, and to live in freedom and safety.

Article 4: No one should be held as a slave, and no one has the right to treat anyone else as their slave.

Article 5: No one has the right to inflict torture, or to subject anyone else to cruel or inhuman treatment.


Article 6: We should all have the same level of legal protection whoever we are, and wherever in the world we are.

Article 7: The law is the same for everyone, and must treat us all equally.

Article 8: We should all have the right to legal support if we are treated unfairly.

Article 9: Nobody should be arrested, put in prison, or sent away from our country unless there is good reason to do so.

Article 10: Everyone accused of a crime has the right to a fair and public trial, and those that try us should be independent and not influenced by others.

Article 11: Everyone accused of a crime has the right to be considered innocent until they have fairly been proven to be guilty.

Article 12: Nobody has the right to enter our home, open our mail, or intrude on our families without good reason. We also have the right to be protected if someone tries to unfairly damage our reputation.

Article 13: We all have the right to move freely within our country, and to visit and leave other countries when we wish.

Article 14: If we are at risk of harm we have the right to go to another country to seek protection.

Article 15: We all have the right to be a citizen of a country and nobody should prevent us, without good reason, from being a citizen of another country if we wish.


Article 16: We should have the right to marry and have a family as soon as we’re legally old enough. Our ethnicity, nationality and religion should not stop us from being able to do this. Men and women have the same rights when they are married and also when they’re separated. We should never be forced to marry. The government has a responsibility to protect us and our family.

Article 17: Everyone has the right to own property, and no one has the right to take this away from us without a fair reason.

Article 18: Everyone has the freedom to think or believe what they want, including the right to religious belief. We have the right to change our beliefs or religion at any time, and the right to publicly or privately practise our chosen religion, alone or with others.

Article 19: Everyone has the right to their own opinions, and to be able to express them freely. We should have the right to share our ideas with who we want, and in whichever way we choose.

Article 20: We should all have the right to form groups and organise peaceful meetings. Nobody should be forced to belong to a group if they don’t want to.

Article 21: We all have the right to take part in our country’s political affairs either by freely choosing politicians to represent us, or by belonging to the government ourselves. Governments should be voted for by the public on a regular basis, and every person’s individual vote should be secret. Every individual vote should be worth the same.

Article 22: The society we live in should help every person develop to their best ability through access to work, involvement in cultural activity, and the right to social welfare. Every person in society should have the freedom to develop their personality with the support of the resources available in that country.

Article 23: We all have the right to employment, to be free to choose our work, and to be paid a fair salary that allows us to live and support our family. Everyone who does the same work should have the right to equal pay, without discrimination. We have the right to come together and form trade union groups to defend our interests as workers.

Article 24: Everyone has the right to rest and leisure time. There should be limits on working hours, and people should be able to take holidays with pay.

Article 25: We all have the right to enough food, clothing, housing and healthcare for ourselves and our families. We should have access to support if we are out of work, ill, elderly, disabled, widowed, or can’t earn a living for reasons outside of our control. An expectant mother and her baby should both receive extra care and support. All children should have the same rights when they are born.

Article 26: Everyone has the right to education. Primary schooling should be free. We should all be able to continue our studies as far as we wish. At school we should be helped to develop our talents, and be taught an understanding and respect for everyone’s human rights. We should also be taught to get on with others whatever their ethnicity, religion, or country they come from. Our parents have the right to choose what kind of school we go to.

Article 27: We all have the right to get involved in our community’s arts, music, literature and sciences, and the benefits they bring. If we are an artist, a musician, a writer or a scientist, our works should be protected and we should be able to benefit from them.

Article 28: We all have the right to live in a peaceful and orderly society so that these rights and freedoms can be protected, and these rights can be enjoyed in all other countries around the world.

Article 29: We have duties to the community we live in that should allow us to develop as fully as possible. The law should guarantee human rights and should allow everyone to enjoy the same mutual respect.

Article 30: No government, group or individual should act in a way that would destroy the rights and freedoms of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.