This book is the first to engage in a broad comparative study of the enforcement of judgments of social rights, such as health, housing, social security and education. It finds both spectacular successes and failures and analyses why there is a variance and what can be done to improve compliance with court rulings.
This book is the first to engage in a broad comparative study of the enforcement of judgments of social rights, such as health, housing, social security and education. It finds both spectacular successes and failures and analyses why there is a variance and what can be done to improve compliance with court rulings.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Part I. Overview: 1. Introduction: from jurisprudence to compliance Malcolm Langford, César Rodríguez-Garavito and Julieta Rossi; 2. Explaining compliance: lessons learnt from civil and political rights Bäak Çal¿ and Anne Koch; 3. Beyond enforcement: assessing and enhancing judicial impact César Rodríguez-Garavito; Part II. Case Studies: 4. Costa Rica: understanding variations in compliance Bruce M. Wilson and Olman A. Rodríguez L.; 5. Argentina: implementation of collective cases Martín Sigal, Julieta Rossi and Diego Morales; 6. Brazil: are collective suits harder to enforce? Octavio Luiz Motta Ferraz; 7. Canada: systemic claims and remedial diversity Bruce Porter; 8. United States: education rights and the parameters of the possible Amanda Shanor and Cathy Albisa; 9. India: compliance with orders on the right to food Poorvi Chitalkar and Varun Gauri; 10. South Africa: rethinking enforcement narratives Malcolm Langford and Steve Kahanovitz; 11. The African human rights system and domestic enforcement Frans Viljoen; 12. Reproductive rights litigation: from recognition to transformation Luisa Cabal and Suzannah Phillips; 13. International housing rights and domestic prejudice: the case of Roma and Travellers Andi Dobrushi and Theodoros Alexandridis; Part III. Concluding Perspectives: 14. Solving the problem of (non)compliance in SE rights litigation Daniel M. Brinks.
Part I. Overview: 1. Introduction: from jurisprudence to compliance Malcolm Langford, César Rodríguez-Garavito and Julieta Rossi; 2. Explaining compliance: lessons learnt from civil and political rights Bäak Çal¿ and Anne Koch; 3. Beyond enforcement: assessing and enhancing judicial impact César Rodríguez-Garavito; Part II. Case Studies: 4. Costa Rica: understanding variations in compliance Bruce M. Wilson and Olman A. Rodríguez L.; 5. Argentina: implementation of collective cases Martín Sigal, Julieta Rossi and Diego Morales; 6. Brazil: are collective suits harder to enforce? Octavio Luiz Motta Ferraz; 7. Canada: systemic claims and remedial diversity Bruce Porter; 8. United States: education rights and the parameters of the possible Amanda Shanor and Cathy Albisa; 9. India: compliance with orders on the right to food Poorvi Chitalkar and Varun Gauri; 10. South Africa: rethinking enforcement narratives Malcolm Langford and Steve Kahanovitz; 11. The African human rights system and domestic enforcement Frans Viljoen; 12. Reproductive rights litigation: from recognition to transformation Luisa Cabal and Suzannah Phillips; 13. International housing rights and domestic prejudice: the case of Roma and Travellers Andi Dobrushi and Theodoros Alexandridis; Part III. Concluding Perspectives: 14. Solving the problem of (non)compliance in SE rights litigation Daniel M. Brinks.
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