Courts and Economic and Social Rights/Courts as Economic and Social Rights
In: The Future of Economic and Social Rights (Katharine G. Young, ed., Cambridge University Press, 2018)
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In: The Future of Economic and Social Rights (Katharine G. Young, ed., Cambridge University Press, 2018)
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Working paper
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Economic and Social Rights" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: DS Law, H. Lau, & A. Schwartz (eds.). Oxford Handbook of Constitutional Law in Asia. Oxford University Press, Ch. 48, Forthcoming
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Working paper
In: Human Rights and Structural Adjustment, S. 135-149
In: Unedited paper due to appear in T. Liefaard, U. Kilkelly, and S. Hoadley (eds) International Law on the Rights of the Child (Springer, Forthcoming)
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Working paper
In: Oxford Handbook of Economic and Social Rights, Forthcoming
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In: Oxford Constitutional Theory Ser.
Food, water, health, housing, and education are fundamental to human freedom and dignity, yet only recently have legal systems begun to secure these fundamental individual interests as rights. This book analyses the transformation of socio-economic rights into constitutional rights, and their impact on public law and constitutional theory.
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In: ASIL Proceedings, 107 Am. Soc'y Int'l L. Proc. 486 2013
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In: Oxford Hand Book on Economic and Social Rights, Oxford University Press, ed. K. Young and M. Langford
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In: Human rights quarterly, Band 40, Heft 4, S. 815-858
ISSN: 1085-794X
In: Human rights review: HRR, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 159-180
ISSN: 1874-6306
In: E. Riedel et al, 'Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Contemporary Issues and Challenges' (Oxford: OUP, Forthcoming)
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Working paper
In: American Journal of Comparative Law, 62:4 (2014): 1043-1098
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In: Globalization and human rights
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.