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Australia’s Engagement with Economic and Social Rights: A Case of Institutional Avoidance

Autor Russell Solomon
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 apr 2022
This book is a contemporary socio-legal study of Australia’s protection of economic and social rights. Despite Australia’s hortatory language of compliance with international rights standards, its translation of these standards into domestic law and policy has been found wanting. In considering Australia’s compliance across the policy areas of health, housing, labour and social security, it is argued that Australia’s failings can be understood in terms of its institutional framework. This framework provides incomplete legal protection for rights and leaves that protection almost exclusively in the realm of politics and policymaking, an arena still dominated by neoliberalism and a political culture averse to the protection and promotion of economic and social rights.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789811600357
ISBN-10: 981160035X
Ilustrații: XI, 283 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2021
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Chapter 1: Introduction - Australia’s engagement with Economic and Social Rights.- Chapter 2: The Right to Health in Australia.- Chapter 3: The Right to Housing in Australia.- Chapter 4: The Right to Work and Rights at Work in Australia.- Chapter 5: The Right to Social Security in Australia.- Chapter 6: Concluding Reflections on Australia’s engagement with Economic and Social Rights.


Notă biografică

Russell Solomon teaches law in the Global Urban and Social Studies School at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Russell Solomon’s book provides a timely and insightful reminder of the neglect, avoidance and regression that has tended to dominate Australia’s treatment of economic and social rights. He reveals the dangers associated with a neoliberal approach to policy making for the realisation of these rights in the absence of any schemes to ensure their constitutional or statutory protection. His focus on the rights to health, housing, work and social security allows him to demonstrate with clarity the differences between welfare or charity based approaches and a genuine human rights based approach.  This book, with its clear and accessible style, will be an asset to anyone with a genuine interest in understanding how Australia can better protect economic and social rights.
-       Prof. John Tobin, Francine V McNiff Chair in International Human Rights Law, Melbourne Law School, Australia

This timely book fillsa gap by focusing on the implementation and protection of economic and social rights in Australia, particularly in the areas of health, housing, labour and social security. Despite extensive international obligations, these rights are under-protected in Australia, a fact which has been brutally exposed by the Covid-19 crisis. Their protection is confined largely to the political and policy arenas dominated by neoliberal thinking rather than by enforceable laws.
-       Prof. Sarah Joseph, Griffith University, Australia
This book is a contemporary socio-legal study of Australia’s protection of economic and social rights. Despite Australia’s hortatory language of compliance with international rights standards, its translation of these standards into domestic law and policy has been found wanting. In considering Australia’s compliance across the policy areas of health, housing, labour and social security, it is argued that Australia’s failings can be understood in terms of its institutional framework. This framework provides incomplete legal protection for rights and leaves that protection almost exclusively in the realm of politics and policymaking, an arena still dominated by neoliberalism and a political culture averse to the protection and promotion of economic and social rights.
Russell Solomon teaches law in the Global Urban and Social Studies School at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia




Caracteristici

Is a contemporary socio-legal study of Australia’s protection of economic and social rights Argues that Australia’s failings can be understood in terms of its institutional framework States that the institutional framework provides incomplete legal protection for rights that is almost exclusively in the realm of politics and policy-m