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Rights, Scarcity, and Justice - An Analytical Inquiry into the Adjudication of the Welfare Aspects of Human Rights (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,999
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Rights, Scarcity, and Justice - An Analytical Inquiry into the Adjudication of the Welfare Aspects of Human Rights (Paperback)
Series: School of Human Rights Research, 65
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Can human rights really protect people from want? If one is lacking
medical care or housing, can one really go to a judge and ask for
the provision of such goods and services? These questions have
proved divisive for academics, politicians and judges working in
the field of human rights. Some consider that there is no real
difference between civil and political rights and economic, social
and cultural rights. Others think that economic, social and
cultural rights have structural features that make their judicial
protection unwelcome. This book aims to move this debate forward.
It starts by recognizing that while there is no abyss between civil
and political rights and economic, social and cultural rights, some
perceptible differences between different duties arising out of
human rights remain. In particular, duties aiming to provide for
basic needs which are significantly costly give rise to problems
that deserve special attention. They are structurally disposed to
give rise to dilemmas. Under human rights, everybody is entitled to
certain goods and services in times of dire need, but in a context
of scarcity, there are not enough resources to provide these goods
and services to everybody. Under what rule or principle would it be
reasonable for judges to intervene in these sorts of situations?
What would be the best approach to these problems? How can a judge
intervene in these problems while maintaining his commitment to the
rights of everyone? The book studies the possibilities of judicial
engagement with matters of welfare in situations of scarcity.
First, it isolates the real problems that such forms of judicial
engagement entail. Afterwards, it presents three distinct
strategies for protecting welfare duties judicially:
reasonableness, prioritization and deliberative democratic
dialogue. Reasonableness is based on the practice of reasonableness
review present in the Constitutional Court of South Africa. By
contrast, prioritization and deliberative democratic dialogue
constitute more novel alternatives to reasonableness that are
loosely inspired in various developments in comparative
constitutional law. Finally, it discusses the relative merits and
demerits of these strategies in an analytical framework based on
qualitative comparative analysis.
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