Judging social rights
Material type: TextSeries: Cambridge studies in constitutional lawPublication details: Cambridge Cambridge Uuniversity Press 2012Description: xxvii,370p. 24 cmISBN:- 9781107400320
- 342.85 22 KI-J
- KF4749 .K557 2012
- LAW018000
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus FOB Library | General Books | 342.85 KI-J (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | 137900 | |||
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342.85 HA-P Protecting human rights and building peace in post-violence societies | 342.85 JO-H Human rights and the unborn child | 342.85 KI-J Judging social rights | 342.85 KI-J Judging social rights | 342.85 KR-D Debate over rights philosophical enquiries | 342.85 KR-D Debate over rights philosophical enquiries | 342.85 KR-D Debate over rights philosophical enquiries |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [328]-355) and index.
Introduction : aims and methods -- Part I. The Case for Constitutional Social Rights -- The case for social rights -- The value of courts in light of the alternatives -- A basic interpretive approach -- Part II. A Theory of Judicial Restraint -- Institutional approaches to judicial restraint -- Democratic legitimacy -- Polycentricity -- Expertise -- Flexibility -- Part III. Incrementalism -- Incrementalism as a general theme.
"States that now contemplate constitutional reform often grapple with the question of whether to constitutionalise social rights. This book presents an argument for why, under the right conditions, doing so can be a good way to advance social justice. In making such a case, the author considers the nature of the social minimum, the role of the court among other institutions, the empirical record of judicial impact and the role of constitutional text. He argues, however, that when enforcing such rights, courts ought to adopt a theory of judicial restraint structured around four principles: democratic legitimacy, polycentricity, expertise and flexibility. These four principles, when taken collectively, commend an incrementalist approach to adjudication. The book combines theoretical, doctrinal, empirical and comparative analysis, and is written to be accessible to lawyers, social scientists, political theorists and human rights advocates"--
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