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Economic and social rights in national constitutions

Economic and social rights in national constitutions
Economic and social rights in national constitutions
Much has been written about the global convergence on constitutional supremacy, and the corresponding rise of an apparently universal constitutional discourse, primarily visible in the context of rights. In this Paper, we examine the global constitutional homogeneity claim with respect to economic and social rights. Based on a new and unique dataset that identifies the status of sixteen distinct economic and social rights in the world's constitutions (195 in total), we make four arguments. First, although economic and social rights (ESRs) have grown increasingly common in national constitutions, not all ESRs are equally widespread. Whereas a right to education is so common as to be practically universal, a right to food and water is still very rare. Second, constitutions accord ESRs different statuses, or strengths. More than some one-third of countries identify all economic and social rights as justiciable, another …
10/f7kqn4
0002-919X
1043-1094
Jung, Courtney
590a234b-2f47-44ec-82ef-cd0583491c8f
Hirschl, Ran
ba5326a4-00bf-4fed-8614-daeb92f3a1d9
Rosevear, Evan
5459603c-339c-4452-b091-a62f9986cf11
Jung, Courtney
590a234b-2f47-44ec-82ef-cd0583491c8f
Hirschl, Ran
ba5326a4-00bf-4fed-8614-daeb92f3a1d9
Rosevear, Evan
5459603c-339c-4452-b091-a62f9986cf11

Jung, Courtney, Hirschl, Ran and Rosevear, Evan (2014) Economic and social rights in national constitutions. The American Journal of Comparative Law, 62 (4), 1043-1094. (10/f7kqn4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Much has been written about the global convergence on constitutional supremacy, and the corresponding rise of an apparently universal constitutional discourse, primarily visible in the context of rights. In this Paper, we examine the global constitutional homogeneity claim with respect to economic and social rights. Based on a new and unique dataset that identifies the status of sixteen distinct economic and social rights in the world's constitutions (195 in total), we make four arguments. First, although economic and social rights (ESRs) have grown increasingly common in national constitutions, not all ESRs are equally widespread. Whereas a right to education is so common as to be practically universal, a right to food and water is still very rare. Second, constitutions accord ESRs different statuses, or strengths. More than some one-third of countries identify all economic and social rights as justiciable, another …

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 October 2014
Published date: December 2014

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 482841
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482841
DOI: 10/f7kqn4
ISSN: 0002-919X
PURE UUID: 6d8eb8c1-82e6-47d3-8d7a-34c32720cdcd

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Date deposited: 13 Oct 2023 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:50

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Contributors

Author: Courtney Jung
Author: Ran Hirschl
Author: Evan Rosevear

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