This article discusses the European Union health-care policy from a human rights law point of view. It departs from the analysis of international and European human rights documents in order to identify core elements and principles associated with the right to access health-care services. These elements and principles are then used to distinguish between individualist and communitarian views of health-care rights and to argue that a human rights approach to the right to access health-care services promotes a communitarian view of this right whereas European Union health-care policy has been promoting an individualist view of this right
The right to health is not recognized in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR or the Conven...
The chapter examines the extent to which the right to health language, concepts and approaches of Ar...
Abstract Medical law and public health law have both served extensively as instruments of health pro...
The purpose of this contribution is to trace a solidaristic conceptualisation of the human right of ...
Taking a cross-disciplinary approach to international human rights law that combines public health, ...
The purpose of this contribution is to trace a solidaristic conceptualisation of the human right of ...
This article offers an integrated account of two strands of global health justice: health-related hu...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
This article explores the very limited cases historically in the twentieth century when human rights...
The article is devoted to the coverage of general theoretical and practical aspects of the protectio...
The European Convention on Human Rights (the Convention, ECHR), a Council of Europe main human right...
This book deals with various facets of the human right to health: its normative profile as a univers...
The article analyzes the key historical stages of the formation of human rights. It is determined th...
While the NHS aims to respect the human rights of every individual, it also has a wider social duty ...
European Union (EU) was founded to strengthen European integration through purely economic cooperati...
The right to health is not recognized in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR or the Conven...
The chapter examines the extent to which the right to health language, concepts and approaches of Ar...
Abstract Medical law and public health law have both served extensively as instruments of health pro...
The purpose of this contribution is to trace a solidaristic conceptualisation of the human right of ...
Taking a cross-disciplinary approach to international human rights law that combines public health, ...
The purpose of this contribution is to trace a solidaristic conceptualisation of the human right of ...
This article offers an integrated account of two strands of global health justice: health-related hu...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
This article explores the very limited cases historically in the twentieth century when human rights...
The article is devoted to the coverage of general theoretical and practical aspects of the protectio...
The European Convention on Human Rights (the Convention, ECHR), a Council of Europe main human right...
This book deals with various facets of the human right to health: its normative profile as a univers...
The article analyzes the key historical stages of the formation of human rights. It is determined th...
While the NHS aims to respect the human rights of every individual, it also has a wider social duty ...
European Union (EU) was founded to strengthen European integration through purely economic cooperati...
The right to health is not recognized in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR or the Conven...
The chapter examines the extent to which the right to health language, concepts and approaches of Ar...
Abstract Medical law and public health law have both served extensively as instruments of health pro...