Intersentia has announced the publication of:
Sisay Alemahu
Yeshanew, The Justiciability of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in the African Regional Human Rights System
The
judicial and quasi-judicial enforceability of economic, social and cultural
(ESC) rights has long been disputed based on some flawed characterizations of
the rights and concerns about the role of adjudication in addressing issues of
socio-economic development. Underscoring the generally poor socio-economic
conditions in most African states, this book argues that the justiciability of
ESC rights in the African regional human rights system plays a subsidiary role
in ensuring social justice and the accountability of public authorities in the
states of the continent. It marries theory and practice relating to the
normative, institutional and procedural aspects of the justiciability of ESC
rights in exploring the actual and potential relevance of the African human
rights system to the amelioration of impoverishment, disease, illiteracy,
homelessness, starvation, marginalization and other related problems that may
be framed in terms of violations of ESC rights.
Gijsbert ter Kuile, Of Bills and Rights: Human rights proofing legislation - Comparing the United Kingdom and The Netherlands
“What actually happens before a bill is drafted? Before it is certified
[as human rights proof]? I do not know; I do not think many people really
know.” This was a fair comment by a long-standing member of the UK Joint
Committee on Human Rights. Who is human rights proofing bills before they come
to Parliament, and indeed when in Parliament? And how is this proofing done?
These questions are under-researched as human rights studies usually focus on
the executive and judiciary branches of government. But what does the
legislative branch do to safeguard human rights?
This book provides answers to these questions by mapping the legislative
processes of both the United
Kingdom and The Netherlands, and comparing
them from an ECHR perspective. It then explains the comparative findings by
proposing a theory of accountability. Because of webs of accountability
legislative actors in both countries actively seek to make bills human rights
compatible. More popularly said: everyone’s fingerprints are on the bills to
try and render them ECHR proof.
The interest of this book lies with the people that support the formal
legislative institutions in this human rights quest. Interviews have been held
in London and The Hague with over 25 civil servants, working in departments
(the ministries of Justice, the Attorney General’s Office, the Council of
State), as draftsmen (the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel), or in the two
parliaments (the JCHR, clerks in the States-General). These frank interviews
provide new material and insights into the formal process of turning bills into
Acts that ideally are Convention proof.
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