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Socio-economic rights in South Africa : Symbols or substance

By: Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2015Description: PBISBN:
  • 9781107546226
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 330 LAN
Contents:
Table of contents 1. Introduction: civil society and rights Malcolm Langford; Part I. Context and Contestation: 2. Constitutional jurisprudence: the first and second waves Stuart Wilson and Jackie Dugard; 3. Socio-economic rights beyond the public/private law divide Sandra Liebenberg; 4. Post-apartheid social movements and legal mobilisation Tzepo Madlingozi; 5. Political power: social pacing, human rights and the development agenda Adam Habit; Part II. Thematic Areas: 6. Rural land tenure: the potential and limits of rights-based approaches Ben Cousins and Ruth Hall; 7. Housing rights litigation: Grootboom and beyond Malcolm Langford; 8. Health rights: politics, places and the need for 'sites for rights' Perris Jones and Nashua Chingore; 9. Social security rights: campaigns and courts Beth Gold blatt and Solingen Rosa; 10. Urban basic services: rights, reality and resistance Jackie Dugard; 11. Realising environmental rights: civic action, leverage, and litigation Rachel Weinberg and David Fig; 12. Access to information and socio-economic rights: a theory of change in practice Kristina Bentley and Richard Calland; 13. Gender and socio-economic rights: the case of gender-based violence and health Lies Gerntholtz and Jennifer MacLeod; 14. Migrants and mobilisation around socio-economic rights Tara Pelzer Nowata and Zahra Jinnah; 15. Concluding perspectives Malcolm Langford, Jackie Dotard, Tzepo Madlingozi and Ben Cousins.
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BOOKs BOOKs National Law School MPP Section 330 LAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 36056

Table of contents
1. Introduction: civil society and rights Malcolm Langford; Part I. Context and Contestation:
2. Constitutional jurisprudence: the first and second waves Stuart Wilson and Jackie Dugard;
3. Socio-economic rights beyond the public/private law divide Sandra Liebenberg;
4. Post-apartheid social movements and legal mobilisation Tzepo Madlingozi;
5. Political power: social pacing, human rights and the development agenda Adam Habit; Part II. Thematic Areas:
6. Rural land tenure: the potential and limits of rights-based approaches Ben Cousins and Ruth Hall; 7. Housing rights litigation: Grootboom and beyond Malcolm Langford;
8. Health rights: politics, places and the need for 'sites for rights' Perris Jones and Nashua Chingore;
9. Social security rights: campaigns and courts Beth Gold blatt and Solingen Rosa;
10. Urban basic services: rights, reality and resistance Jackie Dugard;
11. Realising environmental rights: civic action, leverage, and litigation Rachel Weinberg and David Fig;
12. Access to information and socio-economic rights: a theory of change in practice Kristina Bentley and Richard Calland;
13. Gender and socio-economic rights: the case of gender-based violence and health Lies Gerntholtz and Jennifer MacLeod;
14. Migrants and mobilisation around socio-economic rights Tara Pelzer Nowata and Zahra Jinnah; 15. Concluding perspectives Malcolm Langford, Jackie Dotard, Tzepo Madlingozi and Ben Cousins.

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