Normal view MARC view

Social rights (Topical Term)

Preferred form: Social rights
Used for/see from:
  • Social rights Law and legislation
  • Socio-economic rights
  • Socioeconomic rights
See also:

Work cat.: 2002004514: Struggles for social rights in Latin America, 2002.

International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, ©2004.

Omara, A. Protecting economic and social rights in a constitutionally strong form of judicial review, 2017: abstr. (The 1999-2002 constitutional amendments to Indonesia's Constitution inserted some important features of a modern constitution. These include the introduction of a comprehensive human rights provision and a new constitutional court. This dissertation focuses on these two features and aims to understand the roles of this new court in protecting economic and social rights (ES rights)) p. 1 (protection of economic and social rights) p. 4 (the constitutional court's enforcement of economic and social rights)

Human rights, vol. 44, no. 3 (2019): p. 23 (Human rights scholars recognize five broad categories of rights--civil, political, social, economic, and cultural--outlined in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but rarely practiced in their totality; socioeconomic rights)

Ahmed, D. Social and economic rights, 2017: p. 3 (Socio-economic rights provide protection for the dignity, freedom and well-being of individuals by guaranteeing state-supported entitlements to education, public health care, housing, a living wage, decent working conditions and other social goods) p. 8 (These rights are variously known as 'socio-economic rights' (sometimes 'social, economic and cultural rights') or 'second-generation rights'. In older literature, they were sometimes called 'positive rights', since they promoted a positive view of liberty as 'opportunities for flourishing or well-being'', as contrasted against a negative view of liberty simply as non-interference; After World War II, international treaties and conventions increasingly began to incorporate socio-economic rights, including, most importantly, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR, 1948) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR, 1966))

Moyn, S. Economic rights are human rights, via Foreign policy website, posted Apr. 9, 2018, viewed May 12, 2020 (social and economic rights)

The state of economic and social human rights, 2013: p. 2 (ES rights) p. 3 (entitlements to work, social security, education, and an adequate standard of living, which includes food, clothing, housing, and medical care)

Here are entered works on the right to social security, the rights of families, mothers, and children, and the right to physical and mental health.

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