One of the manifest differences between the Bill of Rights in the interim and the 1996 Constitutions is the more comprehensive treatment of social and economic rights in the latter.1 In addition to the social and economic rights of children contained in section 28(1)(c), education in section 29 and detained persons' rights in section 35(2)(e), Chapter 2 of the 1996 Constitution encapsulates "an entirely new set of rights not foreshadowed in the interim Constitution".2 These relate essentially to housing rights, set out in section 26, and rights protecting health care services, food, water and social security contained in section 27. Certain other provisions also contain socio-economic rights. So, for example, section 25(5)...
l want to thank you very much for inviting me to give a talk on social and economic rights and const...
grantor: University of TorontoOne of the distinguishing features of the 1996 South African...
Despite increasing support for global human rights ..., some scholars and constitutional democracies...
The constitution is explicitly committed to redressing and transforming socio-economic exclusion and...
Socio-economic rights, first articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) sixty y...
This book addresses the pressing issue of severe poverty and inequality, and questions why violation...
Socio-economic rights fail into the category of rights, which is known as the second generation of r...
The international human rights revolution in the decades after the Second World War recognized econo...
Whether socio-economic rights should be entrenched in constitutions has been a subject of lively deb...
This paper begins with an examination of social rights in the South African constitutional drafting ...
The future of economic and social rights is unlikely to resemble its past. Neglected within the huma...
The forging of South Africa's constitution and Bill of Rights in 1996 was undoubtedly an important h...
The drafters of the Constitution clearly envisaged a far-reaching role for it in the transformation ...
A lecture series on fundamental socio-economic rights; from both a Zimbabwean and international per...
South Africa’s democracy has all the building blocks in place to facilitate democratic development a...
l want to thank you very much for inviting me to give a talk on social and economic rights and const...
grantor: University of TorontoOne of the distinguishing features of the 1996 South African...
Despite increasing support for global human rights ..., some scholars and constitutional democracies...
The constitution is explicitly committed to redressing and transforming socio-economic exclusion and...
Socio-economic rights, first articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) sixty y...
This book addresses the pressing issue of severe poverty and inequality, and questions why violation...
Socio-economic rights fail into the category of rights, which is known as the second generation of r...
The international human rights revolution in the decades after the Second World War recognized econo...
Whether socio-economic rights should be entrenched in constitutions has been a subject of lively deb...
This paper begins with an examination of social rights in the South African constitutional drafting ...
The future of economic and social rights is unlikely to resemble its past. Neglected within the huma...
The forging of South Africa's constitution and Bill of Rights in 1996 was undoubtedly an important h...
The drafters of the Constitution clearly envisaged a far-reaching role for it in the transformation ...
A lecture series on fundamental socio-economic rights; from both a Zimbabwean and international per...
South Africa’s democracy has all the building blocks in place to facilitate democratic development a...
l want to thank you very much for inviting me to give a talk on social and economic rights and const...
grantor: University of TorontoOne of the distinguishing features of the 1996 South African...
Despite increasing support for global human rights ..., some scholars and constitutional democracies...