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The Future of Economic and Social Rights Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)

The Future of Economic and Social Rights By Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)

The Future of Economic and Social Rights by Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)


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Summary

Students, academics and practitioners in law and other disciplines will learn from the world's leading experts on economic and social rights - including rights to education, health care, food and housing. The examination of constitutions, courts and international mechanisms signal a transformation in debates about human rights, constitutions, democracy and development.

The Future of Economic and Social Rights Summary

The Future of Economic and Social Rights by Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)

The future of economic and social rights is unlikely to resemble its past. Neglected within the human rights movement, avoided by courts, and subsumed within a single-minded conception of development as economic growth, economic and social rights enjoyed an uncertain status in international human rights law and in the public laws of most countries. However, today, under conditions of immense poverty, insecurity, and political instability, the rights to education, health care, housing, social security, food, water, and sanitation are central components of the human rights agenda. The Future of Economic and Social Rights captures the significant transformations occurring in the theory and practice of economic and social rights, in constitutional and human rights law. Professor Katharine G. Young brings together a group of distinguished scholars from diverse disciplines to examine and advance the broad research field of economic and social rights that incorporates legal, political science, economic, philosophy and anthropology scholars.

The Future of Economic and Social Rights Reviews

'In a fast-growing area, Katharine G. Young stays at the forefront. She is sure-footed, rigorous and empathetic.' Albie Sachs, former Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa
'Methodologically pluralist and ranging widely over the world, these interdisciplinary essays [do much more than survey the existing state of knowledge about social and economic rights. They] define important lines of inquiry for future scholarship. All scholars interested in the field, whatever their discipline, will find much here to help them understand the field and move knowledge forward.' Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, Harvard University, Massachusetts
'Katharine G. Young's impressive collection is an indispensable resource [for anyone working on or with economic and social rights]. Many of the leading voices in the field have contributed their recent findings and insights. Disregarding the fashionable disenchantment with human rights, these chapters analyse and firmly establish the role of rights as instruments of social justice. Spanning four continents and combining multiple scholarly methods and perspectives, this book may not literally predict the future, but it is undoubtedly able to inspire it.' Eva Brems, Universiteit Gent
'Economic and social rights are the future, whether through their realization, contributing to political stability and distributive justice, or through their denial, creating the space for individual and collective disempowerment, rising inequalities, political unrest and social conflict. The thought-provoking perspectives of the contributors to this book offer a nuanced understanding of both possibilities and of what lies in between.' Virginia Bras Gomes, Chair of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

About Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)

Katharine G. Young is Associate Professor of Law at Boston College, Massachusetts. She has published widely in the fields of public law, human rights, and constitutionalism and is the author of Constituting Economic and Social Rights (2012) and editor of The Public Law of Gender (Cambridge, 2016) with Kim Rubenstein. She completed her doctorate in law at Harvard University, and was a fellow at Harvard's Justice, Welfare and Economics program. Amartya Sen is Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, at Harvard University, Massachusetts. His books have been translated into more than thirty languages, and include On Economic Inequality (1973, 1997); Poverty and Famines (1981); Commodities and Capabilities (1985); The Standard of Living (1987); Development as Freedom (1999); The Idea of Justice (2009); An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions (jointly with Jean Dreze, 2013); and The Country of First Boys (2015). Amartya Sen's awards include Bharat Ratna (India); Commandeur de la Legion d'Honneur (France); the National Humanities Medal (USA); Ordem do Merito Cientifico (Brazil); Honorary Companion of Honour (UK); the Aztec Eagle (Mexico); the Edinburgh Medal (UK); the George Marshall Award (USA); the Eisenhower Medal (USA); and the Nobel Prize in Economics.

Table of Contents

Foreword Amartya Sen; 1. Introduction Katharine G. Young; Part I. Adjudication and Rights: Global Trends: 2. Justiciable and aspirational ESRs in national constitutions Evan Rosevear, Ran Hirschl and Courtney Jung; 3. Judicial politics and social rights Malcolm Langford; 4. Constitutional non-transformation? Socioeconomic rights beyond the poor David Landau and Rosalind Dixon; Part II. Adjudication and Rights in Context: Two Contrasts: 5. The Right to Education in the American State Courts Michael A. Rebell; 6. Legislating human rights - experience of the right to Education Act in India Arghya Sengupta, Ajey Sangai, Shruti Ambast and Akriti Gaur; Part III. Adjudication and Rights: Democracy and Courts: 7. The participatory democratic turn in South Africa's social rights jurisprudence Sandra Liebenberg; 8. Why do we care about dialogue? 'Notwithstanding clause', 'meaningful engagement' and public hearings: a sympathetic but critical analysis Roberto Gargarella; 9. Empowered participatory jurisprudence: experimentation, deliberation and norms in socioeconomic rights adjudication Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito; 10. Courts and economic and social rights/ courts as economic and social rights Judith Resnik; Part IV. Economic and Social Rights in Retrenchment: Past and Future: 11. The future of social rights: social rights as capstone Jeff King; 12. The present limits and future potential of European social constitutionalism Colm O'Cinneide; 13. Canada's confounding experience with health rights litigation and the search for a silver lining Colleen M. Flood, Bryan Thomas and David Rodriguez; 14. Universal basic income as a social rights-based antidote to growing economic insecurity Philip Alston; Part V. Economic and Social Rights in Development: Local and Global Trajectories: 15. Rights as logistics: notes on the right to food and food retail liberalization in India Amy J. Cohen and Jason Jackson; 16. Human rights, investment and the rights-ification of development: the practice of 'human rights impact assessments' in large-scale foreign investments in natural resources Jeremy Perelman; 17. Human rights testimony in a different pitch: speaking political power Lucie White; 18. Grassroots lawfare: how South Africa's urban poor use land as a legal instrument Kerry Ryan Chance; Part VI. Rights and Accountability: Emerging Doctrines, Evolving Concepts: 19. Public budget analysis for the realization of economic, social and cultural rights: conceptual framework and practical implementation Olivier De Schutter; 20. Bridging the gap: the evolving doctrine on ESCR and 'maximum available resources Rodrigo Uprimny, Sergio Chaparro and Andres Castro Araujo; 21. Waiting for rights: progressive realization and lost time Katharine G. Young.

Additional information

NPB9781108418133
9781108418133
1108418139
The Future of Economic and Social Rights by Katharine G. Young (Boston College, Massachusetts)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2019-04-11
706
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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