ABSTRACT

This book develops principles of adjudication to facilitate accountability for violations of Economic and Social Rights.

Economic and Social Rights engage with areas relating to social justice and their violation tends to impact on the most vulnerable members of society. Taking the UK as a case study, the book draws on international experience and comparative practice, including progressive reform at the devolved subnational level, that demonstrate the potential reach of Economic and Social Rights when the rights are given legal standing in domestic settings according to their status in international law. The work looks at different models of incorporation of rights into domestic law and sets out existing justiciability mechanisms for their enforcement as well as future models open to development. In so doing the book develops principles of adjudication drawn from deliberative democracy theory that help address some of the critiques of social rights adjudication.

This book will have a global and cross-sectoral appeal to legal practitioners, the judiciary and the civil services, as well as to researchers, academics and students in the fields of human rights law, comparative constitutional law and deliberative democracy theory.

Chapter 1 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

chapter 1|45 pages

Principles of ESR Adjudication

chapter 2|31 pages

ESR in International Law

Justiciability and Remedies

chapter 3|27 pages

The Jurisdictional Hierarchy as Pillars of the UK Constitution

The Regional Framework

chapter 4|33 pages

The Constitutional Resistance to Human Rights

The UK in a Comparative Context

chapter 5|62 pages

Models of ESR Justiciability

Existing Mechanisms and Future Options

chapter 6|70 pages

ESR and Devolution