of \u200b\u200b "expanding" the legal status of a person by adding social aspects. At
the same time, in practice it is recognized that these rights are often implemented
gradually ("progressive realisation") and depend on public resources. (Saul et al., 2014)
For the concept of "constitutional person" this means that the legal status of a person
constitutes not only participation and freedom, but also the provision of opportunities for
the use of these freedoms; a person becomes a full-fledged citizen in the social space.
The third generation or solidarity (collective) rights form the global dimension of human
rights, going beyond the national individual and heading towards groups, peoples,
humanity as a whole. Among such rights are the right to development, the right to peace,
the right to a healthy environment, the right of peoples to self-determination (Khoo,
2015). As Schabas (2021b) notes, although the status of these rights in international law
remains debatable, they are collective in nature and often require the cooperation of
many actors (states, international organizations, civil society). In national doctrine, the
integration of these rights at the constitutional or legislative level is a difficult task;
however, they contribute to the interpretation of a person as a participant in the global
community, and not exclusively a national citizen. Thus, the "constitutional person"
acquires the features of a subject capable of acting in global processes – through the
challenges of ecology, development, peace, solidarity.
Recently, against the backdrop of rapid technological, bioethical, and digital
development, as well as environmental challenges, a discourse about the fourth and even
fifth generation of human rights has been taking shape. In the article "Fourth Generation
Human Rights in View of the Fourth Industrial Revolution" emphasizes that the current
three-generation scheme is insufficient to respond to the challenges of biotechnology,
information technology, artificial intelligence. (López Baroni, 2020). Scientific research
emphasizes that the concepts of "digital rights", "epistemic rights" in the digital world,
"biomaterial" or "somatic rights", the rights of future generations and the rights of nature
are gaining popularity (Sepúlveda et al., 2004). In the context of implementation, such
rights pose new challenges: protection of personal data, digital identity, autonomy of
biotechnological interventions, the right to a healthy and sustainable environment, the
right to technological identity. For the model of "constitutional man" this means that the
individual becomes a subject not only of political and social relations, but also of the
digital, biotechnological and ecological space; the legal status of "constitutional man"
must take into account the technological, ecological, transhuman challenges of the 21st
century.
There is not just a chronological, but a functional-systemic connection between all
generations of human rights. The rights of the first generation create the legal basis of
individual subjectivity; the rights of the second generation provide the possibility of
realizing this subjectivity in the social space; the rights of the third generation expand
the field to groups, peoples and the international community; the rights of the fourth and
fifth generations open up new horizons for the subject in the digital, bioethical, ecological
dimensions. Scientific doctrine emphasizes that rights cannot be considered in isolation;
that is, they are universal, inalienable, interdependent and mutually reinforcing (Risse,
2021). It is through such a consistent integration of different generations of rights that
a holistic image of a "constitutional person" is formed, that is, a legal subject who is