This book is a first-of-its-kind, five-country empirical study of
the causes and consequences of social and economic rights
litigation. Detailed studies of Brazil, India, Indonesia, Nigeria,
and South Africa present systematic and nuanced accounts of court
activity on social and economic rights in each country. The book
develops new methodologies for analyzing the sources of and
variation in social and economic rights litigation, explains why
actors are now turning to the courts to enforce social and economic
rights, measures the aggregate impact of litigation in each
country, and assesses the relevance of the empirical findings for
legal theory. This book argues that courts can advance social and
economic rights under the right conditions precisely because they
are never fully independent of political pressures.
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