The article investigates the negative attitude towards civil society over the last decade in the United Kingdom and the repercussions for human rights. It considers this in the context of the United Kingdom government’s implementation of the policy of austerity. It reflects on the various policy and legal changes, and the impact on the campaigning and advocacy work of civil society organizations, particularly those that work on social and economic rights
The introduction of the national minimum wage at the end of the 1990s in the UK represented an impor...
This article examines the official concept of social justice, as advanced by the Coalition governmen...
Public support for human rights in the UK remains limited, partly as a result of misleading media co...
This study uses discourse analysis of the critical views expressed in the corpus of United Nations’ ...
This article discusses the UK Government’s proposals to reform human rights legislation in England a...
This report is an updated version of a report of the same title published by CAF in April 2016 to co...
In many ways, writing about the economic crisis in the UK is telling a story about the past. Recentl...
The drive by the Conservative Party to dismantle human rights protection in the United Kingdom has f...
This article explores civil society organisations’ (CSOs) participation in judicial review proceedin...
© 2014 Taylor & Francis. Public support for human rights in the UK remains limited, partly as a re...
This article discusses the implications of the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA). It suggests that the HRA...
This first pan-regional analysis of civil society organizations’ perspectives on the contemporary si...
This article explores the role of civil society in monitoring the executive as perceived by the Euro...
There arguably exists something of a great human rights divide stretching across the ninety-six mile...
Devolution provides both a foundation and a vehicle for progressive reform in relation to human righ...
The introduction of the national minimum wage at the end of the 1990s in the UK represented an impor...
This article examines the official concept of social justice, as advanced by the Coalition governmen...
Public support for human rights in the UK remains limited, partly as a result of misleading media co...
This study uses discourse analysis of the critical views expressed in the corpus of United Nations’ ...
This article discusses the UK Government’s proposals to reform human rights legislation in England a...
This report is an updated version of a report of the same title published by CAF in April 2016 to co...
In many ways, writing about the economic crisis in the UK is telling a story about the past. Recentl...
The drive by the Conservative Party to dismantle human rights protection in the United Kingdom has f...
This article explores civil society organisations’ (CSOs) participation in judicial review proceedin...
© 2014 Taylor & Francis. Public support for human rights in the UK remains limited, partly as a re...
This article discusses the implications of the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA). It suggests that the HRA...
This first pan-regional analysis of civil society organizations’ perspectives on the contemporary si...
This article explores the role of civil society in monitoring the executive as perceived by the Euro...
There arguably exists something of a great human rights divide stretching across the ninety-six mile...
Devolution provides both a foundation and a vehicle for progressive reform in relation to human righ...
The introduction of the national minimum wage at the end of the 1990s in the UK represented an impor...
This article examines the official concept of social justice, as advanced by the Coalition governmen...
Public support for human rights in the UK remains limited, partly as a result of misleading media co...