Contesting housing inequality: Housing rights and social movements
Contesting housing inequality: Housing rights and social movements
This article engages with a leading contemporary criticism of social and economic human rights, namely that because such rights are organised around sufficiency norms, they are ill-equipped to challenge and overturn forms of material inequality. The sufficiency thesis raises issues around the nature of social rights and their capacity to deliver transformative change, and lays a direct challenge to social movements employing human rights talk and practices in campaigns for social justice. This article breaks new ground by taking the right to housing as a case study for assessing the sufficiency thesis. It is argued that while there is some support for the sufficiency thesis in dominant institutionalised legal forms of the right to housing, the wider claim of the thesis, that social rights are incapable of challenging forms of material inequality, does not hold water. This argument is supported by a broad approach to housing rights that engages with the work of the UN Special Rapporteurs on housing and which takes seriously the way in which contemporary social movements in Spain and Scotland employ housing rights in their struggles for housing justice.
52-79
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78
January 2024
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78
Jordan, Mark
(2024)
Contesting housing inequality: Housing rights and social movements.
Modern Law Review, 87 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/1468-2230.12828).
Abstract
This article engages with a leading contemporary criticism of social and economic human rights, namely that because such rights are organised around sufficiency norms, they are ill-equipped to challenge and overturn forms of material inequality. The sufficiency thesis raises issues around the nature of social rights and their capacity to deliver transformative change, and lays a direct challenge to social movements employing human rights talk and practices in campaigns for social justice. This article breaks new ground by taking the right to housing as a case study for assessing the sufficiency thesis. It is argued that while there is some support for the sufficiency thesis in dominant institutionalised legal forms of the right to housing, the wider claim of the thesis, that social rights are incapable of challenging forms of material inequality, does not hold water. This argument is supported by a broad approach to housing rights that engages with the work of the UN Special Rapporteurs on housing and which takes seriously the way in which contemporary social movements in Spain and Scotland employ housing rights in their struggles for housing justice.
Text
Contesting housing inequality M Jordan
- Author's Original
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
Text
Modern Law Review - 2023 - Jordan - Contesting Housing Inequality Housing Rights and Social Movements
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 23 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 July 2023
Published date: January 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473012
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473012
ISSN: 0026-7961
PURE UUID: 8daae279-f099-46e1-8ffd-250c73143471
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 22 Jan 2025 17:43
Last modified: 23 Jan 2025 02:46
Export record
Altmetrics
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics