
Constituting Economic and Social Rights
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- List of Abbreviations
- 1. Introduction: The Path to Transformation
- A. A process-driven, value-based, and interdependent conception
- B. "Constituting" rights: a three-part framework
- C. Exploring fundamental rights through institutions
- PART I: CONSTITUTING RIGHTS BY INTERPRETATION
- 2. Interpretive Standpoints
- A. Rationalism
- B. Consensualism
- C. Blurring the distinction
- 3. Interpreting the Minimum
- A. The minimum core in international human rights law
- B. Prospects for constitutional law
- C. Countering a minimalist discourse
- 4. Interpreting Limits
- A. Limits by design: six modes
- B. The justification of limits
- C. The test of reasonableness
- D. Proportionality in limits
- PART II: CONSTITUTING RIGHTS BY ENFORCEMENT
- 5. A Typology of Judicial Review
- A. Usurpation versus abdication: the two wrongs of enforcement
- B. Disaggregating enforcement
- C. Evaluating enforcement
- D. A typology of judicial review
- 6. The Catalytic Court
- A. The role of the court, as understood by the court
- B. The catalytic court
- C. The catalytic court in South Africa
- 7. A Comparative Typology of Courts
- A. A typology of role conceptions
- B. Elements of supremacy: Colombia
- C. Elements of engagement: India
- D. Elements of detachment: United Kingdom
- E. Courts in their institutional context
- PART III: CONSTITUTING RIGHTS BY CONTESTATION
- 8. Social Movements and Economic and Social Rights
- A. Prologue: the right to health in Ghana
- B. Anatomy of an economic and social rights social movement
- C. Beyond popular constitutionalism
- D. The role of social movements for economic and social rights: South Africa
- 9. The Governance Function of Economic and Social Rights
- A. Prologue: the right to health in South Africa
- B. From constitutionalism to (new) governance
- C. Experimentalist features of the Treatment Action Campaign
- D. A constitutionalist backdrop for experimentalist governance
- 10. Conclusion: Economic and Social Rights as Human Rights and Constitutional Rights
- Appendix I: Excerpts from Various Constitutions
- Appendix II: Excerpts from International Human Rights Instruments
- Selective Bibliography
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
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