Right to the continuous improvement of living conditions : responding to complex global challenges /
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Edition: | First edition. |
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Imprint: | London, England : Zed Books, 2021. [London, England] : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021 |
Description: | 1 online resource (352 pages) |
Language: | English |
Series: | Oąti International Series in Law and Society Oąti International Series in Law and Society |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13483504 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Foreword Sandra Liebenberg ( Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
- 1. Introduction: Developing the Neglected Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions in a Challenging Context Jessie Hohmann (University of Technology Sydney, Australia) and Beth Goldblatt ( University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
- Part I. Defining and Interpreting the Right: the ICESCR and the Work of the CESCR
- 2. Sources for A Nascent Interpretation of the Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions: The Travaux Prp̌aratoires and the Work of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Jessie Hohmann ( University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
- 3. Cooperating to Continuously Improve Meghan Campbell (University of Birmingham, UK)
- Part II. Responding to the Right within its Economic Context
- 4. The Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions as a Response to Poverty Luke Graham (Coventry University, UK)
- 5. Is Financial Inclusion a Proxy for Peoples' Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions? Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky ( Universidad Nacional de Río Negro, Argentina) and Francisco Cantamutto ( National University of the South, Argentina)
- 6. The Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions as a Meta Right and the Need to Reassess the Progressive Realisation of Social Rights and of the Right to Social Security: Canada as a Case Study Lucie Lamarche (Universit ̌du Qub̌ec à Montrǎl, Canada)
- Part III. Understanding the Right in Light of Other Human Rights Interpretations
- 7. The Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions: Understanding Forgotten Rights Naomi Lott ( University of Nottingham, UK)
- 8. The Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions and Human Rights of Future Generations ? a Circle Impossible to Square? Sigrun Skogly ( Lancaster University, UK)
- 9. From Dignified Life to the Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions: New Synergies and Possibilities in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights Isaac de Paz Gonzl̀ez (Autonomous University of Baja California, Mexico).
- Part IV. Continuous Improvement, Gender and Care
- 10. (Dis)Continuous Improvement: Canada, Indigenous Peoples, Lobster and Child Welfare Jeffery Hewitt ( York University, Canada)
- 11. The Work of Living - Social Reproduction and the Right to the Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions Beth Goldblatt ( University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
- 12. Measure for Measure: The Challenges of Measuring Continuous Improvement and Lessons from the Sustainable Development Goals Sandra Fredman ( University of Oxford, UK)
- 13. Entangled Rights and Reproductive Temporality: Legal Form, Continuous Improvement of Living Conditions, and Social Reproduction Ruth Fletcher ( Queen Mary University of London, UK)
- Index.