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Since the Second World War, dignity has increasingly been
recognized as an important moral and legal value. Although
important examples of dignity-based arguments can be found in
western European and North American case law and legal theory, the
dignity jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court of South African
is widely considered to be the most sweeping in the world. In part,
this is related to the unique provisions of the South African
Constitution in areas such as socioeconomic rights and allowing
dignity to be taken into the sphere of economic justice as well as
that of human rights. This book brings together the first sixteen
years of constitutional jurisprudence addressing the meaning, role,
and reach of dignity in the law of South Africa as a multiracial
democracy. The case law is coupled with analysis from a range of
selected contributors. The book will therefore be a crucial source
for anyone seeking to evaluate dignity, whether in law or in human
life more broadly.
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