The whole phenomenon under examination here — how fundamental rights are determined — is tied to a process of exploring and selecting responses to political change, including measures of political control, which are compatible with country-specific experiences. In further Third World examples, dealt with more fully below, the incipient demands for public accountability by opposition groups, in the form of community-based political parties or transcendent groups coalescing around occupational or geographic affiliations, are evidence of an exploration of constitutional routes for the identification and legitimation of fundamental rights