This article deals with the substantive meaning of the human right of social assistance. The central question is how normative human rights principles can be reconciled with system characteristics which are part of the practical reality of social assistance law and administration. In order to answer this question, we present illustrations of how the human right of social assistance has been operationalised, with a particular emphasis on the judgments and opinions of courts and quasi-judicial institutions. What emerges is that the meaning of the human right of social assistance is not fixed or to be found in some natural law abstraction. It is organically created in the process of confronting human rights principles with the system character...
The author introduces a fundamental distinction between human rights and the law of human rights whi...
The author points at the necessity to work out of universal conception of human rights and duties. I...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
This article deals with the substantive meaning of the human right of social assistance. The central...
"An essential introduction to rights-based approaches in social policy, this text critically explore...
An essential introduction to rights-based approaches in social policy, this text critically explores...
This article gives a broad overview of the fundamental right of social assistance. The central quest...
The article reveals the issues connected with the legal characteristic of the right to social assist...
The paper is an approach to present the category of social rights in the background of entire legal...
This paper addresses the question of the normative domains of human rights and social justice. Today...
This article sets out the fecundity of the Capability Approach for a sociology of human rights. The ...
Human rights entered the language and practice of humanitarian aid in the mid-1990s, and since then ...
Social rights may be understood as articulations of human need; as the mutual claims that human bein...
The subject of the article is the formation and development of the General theory of human rights (i...
The article examines the anthropological origins and nature of human rights, as well as derivatives ...
The author introduces a fundamental distinction between human rights and the law of human rights whi...
The author points at the necessity to work out of universal conception of human rights and duties. I...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...
This article deals with the substantive meaning of the human right of social assistance. The central...
"An essential introduction to rights-based approaches in social policy, this text critically explore...
An essential introduction to rights-based approaches in social policy, this text critically explores...
This article gives a broad overview of the fundamental right of social assistance. The central quest...
The article reveals the issues connected with the legal characteristic of the right to social assist...
The paper is an approach to present the category of social rights in the background of entire legal...
This paper addresses the question of the normative domains of human rights and social justice. Today...
This article sets out the fecundity of the Capability Approach for a sociology of human rights. The ...
Human rights entered the language and practice of humanitarian aid in the mid-1990s, and since then ...
Social rights may be understood as articulations of human need; as the mutual claims that human bein...
The subject of the article is the formation and development of the General theory of human rights (i...
The article examines the anthropological origins and nature of human rights, as well as derivatives ...
The author introduces a fundamental distinction between human rights and the law of human rights whi...
The author points at the necessity to work out of universal conception of human rights and duties. I...
The idea of human rights, although often discussed as if its meaning were self-evident, is, in reali...