Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa
Symbols or Substance?
Ben Cousins editor Malcolm Langford editor Jackie Dugard editor Tshepo Madlingozi editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:6th Aug '15
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- Hardback£125.00(9781107021143)
This insightful examination reveals the impact of socio-economic strategies in civil society, focusing on their role in shaping rights discourse in Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa.
The book Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa delves into the complex relationship between civil society actors and socio-economic strategies within the nation. It examines various socio-economic rights, exploring how these rights have shaped civil society discourse and actions over time. The authors provide a comprehensive analysis of national trends in law and political economy, emphasizing the significance of socio-economic rights in the broader context of constitutional development and social mobilization.
Critics have raised concerns regarding the effectiveness of the rights-based approach, suggesting that it has not led to the anticipated social transformation. In addressing these criticisms, Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa investigates the actual impact of socio-economic strategies employed by civil society. The authors present evidence indicating that while some strategies have yielded tangible material and political outcomes, these successes are often contingent upon factors such as the nature of the claims made, the level of mobilization, and the formation of strategic alliances.
Through a detailed exploration of these dynamics, the book sheds light on the intricate interplay between socio-economic rights and civil society's role in advocating for social change. Ultimately, Socio-Economic Rights in South Africa offers valuable insights into the potential for socio-economic rights to drive meaningful transformation, while also acknowledging the challenges that persist in realizing these goals.
'South Africa long has been an inspiration to the world for its struggle against apartheid, peaceful transition to a multiracial democracy, and new constitution with a comprehensive declaration of rights … Many have waited eagerly to see how the promise would be realized. [This book] offers the most illuminating answers to date. With great theoretical sophistication and unparalleled empirical data, it charts the complex ways in which rights and social movements are mutually constitutive in the engagement with such diverse issues as land, health care, the delivery of water, sanitation and electricity, the environment, access to information, gender, and immigration. Everyone interested in understanding how struggles for socio-economic rights differ from the more familiar earlier contests over legal and political rights must read this book.' Richard Abel, Connell Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Politics by Other Means: Law in the Struggle against Apartheid, 1980–94
'This volume makes an extraordinary contribution to the increasingly sophisticated literature on socio-economic rights globally. Rooted in a deeply contextual approach to the conditions under which civil society engages the ideas, laws and institutions through which socio-economic resources are struggled for and produced, [it] offers important insights into the complexity of understanding and achieving these rights. The different contributions offer … insights into a vast range of different socio-economic resources … yet the volume successfully roots these various resource struggles in the political economy of post-apartheid South Africa. At the same time [it] highlights a range of theoretical questions … Langford, Cousins, Dugard and Madlingozi must be congratulated on bringing together such a rich range of contributions that transform and deepen our understanding of socio-economic rights in South Africa and beyond.' Heinz Klug, Evjue-Bascom Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin Law School
'Dugard, Cousins, Langford, and Madlingozi - clear voices that understand the power and limitation of rights language - have edited a pioneering work that should both inspire and chastise the South African human rights movement. They insightfully show a state and civil society seduced by the medium of economic and social rights, and how rights-based strategies can be dynamic, but also vulnerable to capture by the status quo. One cannot but conclude that the South African laboratory proves that the rights discourse is not a path for total liberation from human privation.' Makau Mutua, SUNY Distinguished Professor and Floyd H. and Hilda L. Hurst Faculty Scholar, State University of New York
ISBN: 9781107546226
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 650g
488 pages