Securing Dignity and Freedom through Human Rights: Article 22 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, cartea 3
Autor Janelle M. Dilleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 dec 2011
The legal principles rooted in article 22 create a vital connection between human rights and development that reshapes development cooperation, in relations between States and in multilateral efforts like the Millennium Development Goals and policies of international financial institutions. Development success needs to be redefined to include reducing inequality and assisting the most vulnerable and marginalized. Development processes should integrate methods that ensure participation, transparency and accountability. Even so, democratic processes are no guarantee that ESC rights will be taken seriously, nor do they necessarily lead to full elimination of economic and social inequality. Judicial enforcement and solidarity among private actors, and attention to the synergies that realization of one ESC right provides another are equally important to making the entitlement a reality for all.
The approach to human rights in article 22 acts as a compass in the pursuit of social justice. Its course to realizing ESC rights reaches beyond mere assets and material comforts, and surpasses quantitative assessments of equality and non-discrimination, critical as these may be. Rather, progress toward social justice through ESC rights is measured by assessing whether the opportunities, resources and freedoms provided to people are sufficient for their full and free development as human beings, individually and as members of society. Article 22 affirms the vision of a just society in which dignity and personal development are secured with ESC rights that offer the chance for well-being to everyone.
This book is the third volume in The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Series. The Series will consist of approximately 20 volumes, each dealing with a substantive right (or group of rights) set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Each volume is authored by an expert in human rights generally and in the particular subject addressed. Without losing sight of the political context in which the implementation of human rights must occur, each book provides a comprehensive, legally-oriented analysis of the rights concerned, including an examination of the legislative history of the text of each right as adopted in 1948, the right's subsequent articulation and interpretation by international bodies and in subsequent international instruments, and a survey of state practice in defining and enforcing the right.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004209398
ISBN-10: 9004209395
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 160 x 240 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
ISBN-10: 9004209395
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 160 x 240 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Cuprins
Excerpt of table of contents:
I Introduction;
II Legal Context: A. Article 22 in relation to the UN Charter; B. Role of article 22 within the text of the Declaration;
III The textual elements and drafting origins of article 22: A. The drafting process leading up to the Declaration; B. The idea for an umbrella article on implementation of ESC rights; C. Ordinary meaning, context, and drafting history of the article;
IV Understanding the entitlement to security through ESC rights: A. “. . . the right to social security”; B. “Everyone, as a member of society”; C. ESC rights “indispensable for . . . dignity and free development of . . . personality”;
V Realizing the entitlement through national effort and international cooperation: A. “Entitled to realization”; B.“through national effort and international co-operation”; C.“ in accordance with the organization and resources of each State”;
VI Conclusions and Recommendations: A. Security for human dignity and freedom through ESC rights; B.Everyone as a member of society: shared responsibility; C. Claiming the entitlement to ESC rights; D. National effort and international cooperation: emerging frameworks; E. Enhancing accountability for conduct affecting ESC rights;
F. Beyond development: human rights as a compass for social justice.
I Introduction;
II Legal Context: A. Article 22 in relation to the UN Charter; B. Role of article 22 within the text of the Declaration;
III The textual elements and drafting origins of article 22: A. The drafting process leading up to the Declaration; B. The idea for an umbrella article on implementation of ESC rights; C. Ordinary meaning, context, and drafting history of the article;
IV Understanding the entitlement to security through ESC rights: A. “. . . the right to social security”; B. “Everyone, as a member of society”; C. ESC rights “indispensable for . . . dignity and free development of . . . personality”;
V Realizing the entitlement through national effort and international cooperation: A. “Entitled to realization”; B.“through national effort and international co-operation”; C.“ in accordance with the organization and resources of each State”;
VI Conclusions and Recommendations: A. Security for human dignity and freedom through ESC rights; B.Everyone as a member of society: shared responsibility; C. Claiming the entitlement to ESC rights; D. National effort and international cooperation: emerging frameworks; E. Enhancing accountability for conduct affecting ESC rights;
F. Beyond development: human rights as a compass for social justice.
Notă biografică
Janelle M. Diller has extensive experience in international law in both public and private practice and has taught international human rights law, including at Georgetown University Law Center and the University of Virginia law School. Her writings focus on topical issues in the conceptualization of international law, particularly in areas that concern human rights and social justice, and in relation to domestic legal systems as well as international organizations and non-state actors. She is the Deputy Legal Adviser of the International Labour Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. The views in the book are presented solely in her personal capacity and do not represent the policy of the International Labour Organization.