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Borderlines in Private Law

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Socio-economic Rights in South Africa: Symbols or Substance?

Edited by: Malcolm Langford, Ben Cousins, Jackie Dugard, Tshepo Madlingozi

ISBN13: 9781107021143
Published: January 2014
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00
Paperback edition , ISBN13 9781107546226



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The embrace of socio-economic rights in South Africa has featured prominently in scholarship on constitution making, legal jurisprudence and social mobilisation. But the development has attracted critics who claim that this turn to rights has not generated social transformation in practice. This book sets out to assess one part of the puzzle and asks what has been the role and impact of socio-economic strategies used by civil society actors. Focusing on a range of socio-economic rights and national trends in law and political economy, the book's authors show how socio-economic rights have influenced the development of civil society discourse and action. The evidence suggests that some strategies have achieved material and political impact but this is conditional on the nature of the claim, degree of mobilisation and alliance building, and underlying constraints.

Subjects:
South Africa, Other Jurisdictions
Contents:
1. Introduction: civil society and rights Malcolm Langford

Part I. Context and Contestation:
2. Constitutional jurisprudence: the first and second waves Stuart Wilson and Jackie Dugard
3. Socio-economic rights beyond the public/private law divide Sandra Liebenberg
4. Post-apartheid social movements and legal mobilisation Tshepo Madlingozi
5. Political power: social pacting, human rights and the development agenda Adam Habib

Part II. Thematic Areas:
6. Rural land tenure: the potential and limits of rights-based approaches Ben Cousins and Ruth Hall
7. Housing rights litigation: Grootboom and beyond Malcolm Langford
8. Health rights: politics, places and the need for 'sites for rights' Peris Jones and Nyasha Chingore
9. Social security rights: campaigns and courts Beth Goldblatt and Solange Rosa
10. Urban basic services: rights, reality and resistance Jackie Dugard
11. Realising environmental rights: civic action, leverage, and litigation Rachel Wynberg and David Fig
12. Access to information and socio-economic rights: a theory of change in practice Kristina Bentley and Richard Calland
13. Gender and socio-economic rights: the case of gender-based violence and health Liesl Gerntholtz and Jennifer MacLeod
14. Migrants and mobilisation around socio-economic rights Tara Polzer Ngwato and Zaheera Jinnah
15. Concluding perspectives Malcolm Langford, Jackie Dugard, Tshepo Madlingozi and Ben Cousins.