توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Social Rights and the Constitutional Moment: Learning from Chile and International Experiences
نام کتاب : Social Rights and the Constitutional Moment: Learning from Chile and International Experiences
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : حقوق اجتماعی و لحظه قانون اساسی: یادگیری از شیلی و تجارب بین المللی
سری : Human Rights Law in Perspective
نویسندگان : Koldo Casla, Magdalena Sepúlveda, Vicente Silva, Valentina Contreras (editors)
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 263
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509951895 , 9781509951918
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nList of Contributors\nList of Cases\n1. Introduction: Social Rights and the Constitutional Moment\n I. Chile\'s Constitutional Moment\n II. The Constitutionalisation of Social Rights\n III. This Book\'s Contribution\n2. Yesterday\'s Accomplices, Beneficiaries of Today: The Knots of Inequality Tied by the Dictatorship\n I. Introduction\n II. Economic Complicity and Inequality\n III. Complicity, Economic and Social Rights, and the New Constitution\n IV. Conclusions\n3. An Open Constitution to Reverse Chile\'s Neoliberal Trajectory\n I. Introduction\n II. Economic Constitution\n III. The Constitution of 1980 and Neoliberal Consolidation\n IV. A Constitution to Reverse the Neoliberal Trajectory\n V. Conclusions\n4. Advancing Equal Rights in Constitutions: Insights from 193 Countries\n I. Introduction\n II. Whose Rights? Covering All Forms of Discrimination\n III. Which Rights? Key Protections for All Groups\n IV. The State of the World: Protections for Equal Rights in 193 Constitutions\n V. Strengthening Equal Rights Protections: Considerations for Specific Groups\n VI. Addressing Historic Discrimination: Context-Specific Considerations\n VII. Conclusion\n5. Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa’s Constitution:\rAspirations, Achievements, Disappointments and Lessons\n I. Introduction\n II. Aspirations\n III. Achievements\n IV. Disappointments\n V. Lessons\n VI. Conclusion\n6. Publicity and the Rule of Law: Access to Public Information in the Political Constitution of Colombia\n I. Introduction\n II. Origin and Evolution\n III. Access to Public Information as a Guarantee of ESC Rights\n IV. Conclusion\n7. The Path of the Inter-American Court Towards Direct Justiciability\rof Economic, Social, Cultural\rand Environmental Rights:\rImpact on Domestic Legal Systems\n I. Introduction\n II. The Court\'s Change of Direction and its Impact on Domestic Legal Systems\n III. A Brief Overview: From Indirect to Direct Justiciability\n IV. Direct and Autonomous Justiciability of Economic, Social, Cultural and Environmental Rights through Article 26: from Lagos del Campo to Lhaka Honhat Association\n V. Scope of the Right to Health: Elder People, HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Intersectional Discrimination\n VI. Conclusion\n8. Constitutional Provisions on Disability Rights: National Approaches\rand International Context\n I. Introduction\n II. The International Context of Disability Rights\n III. Protection of Disability Rights in Constitutions Worldwide\n IV. New Constitutions following the CRPD\'s Adoption\n V. Conclusion\n9. Persons with Disabilities in the Chilean Constitution-Making Process\n I. Introduction\n II. Persons with Disabilities in the Constitution-Making Process\n III. The Electoral Quota for Persons with Disabilities in the Constitution-Making Process\n IV. Conclusions\n10. The Right to Education in Chile: Evolution, Critical Issues and Perspectives of Change\n I. Introduction\n II. Education and the Market: Origins and Continuity\n III. Structural Transformations\n IV. Problems and Challenges\n V. Conclusion\n11. Integrating the Abidjan Principles\ron the Right to Education\rinto the Constitution:\rKeys for the Chilean Process\n I. Introduction\n II. The Constitutional Protection of the Right to Education\n III. The Abidjan Principles and the Right to Education\n IV. Tensions in the Chilean Context\n V. Legal Incorporation of the Right to Education in Light of the Abidjan Principles\n VI. Aligning the Constitution with the Right to Education\n VII. Conclusion\n12. Taking the Right to Adequate\rHousing Seriously in Chile’s Next Constitution: Building from Scratch\n I. Introduction\n II. A Look at International Human Rights Law and Comparative Practice\n III. Constitutionalising the Right to Adequate Housing in Chile: What it Means in Practice\n IV. Concluding Remarks\n13. Health Rights in the New Chilean Constitution\n I. Introduction\n II. A Moral Foundation for Health Rights\n III. Modern Healthcare Systems\n IV. Health Resource Allocation Models\n V. The Chilean Healthcare Allocation Model\n VI. Proposal to Enshrine Health Rights in the New Chilean Constitution\n VII. Conclusion\n14. The Right to Social Security in Chile\'s Constitution: Considerations and Opportunities\n I. Chilean Context: The Social Contract and the Role of Social Security\n II. Social Security and its Role in Society\n III. Right to Social Security: Principles and the Importance of a Rights-Based Approach\n IV. Brief Comparative Summary of Social Security Rights as Envisaged in Constitutions across the Globe\n V. Conclusion\n15. Environmental Issues in a New Constitution\n I. Introduction\n II. The Constitution of 1980: Oblivious to the Collective Nature of Environmental Issues\n III. A Greener Constitution\nBibliography\nIndex