Judicial review, socio-economic rights and the Human Rights Act
Judicial review, socio-economic rights and the Human Rights Act
Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland > England and Wales > Judicial review. Appeals
Edition Details
- Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): Ellie Palmer
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): England
- Publication Information: Oxford ; Portland, Or. : Hart Publishing, 2007
- Material: Internet resource
- Type: Book, Internet Resource
- Series title: Human rights law in perspective, v. 10.
- Permalink: https://books.lawi.org.uk/judicial-review-socio-economic-rights-and-the-human-rights-act/ (Stable identifier)
Short Description
XXXVIII, 345 pages ; 25 cm.
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Judicial review, socio-economic rights and the Human Rights Act is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Judicial review, socio-economic rights and the Human Rights Act in Google Books
- Find Judicial review, socio-economic rights and the Human Rights Act in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Responsable Person: Ellie Palmer.
- Publication Date: 2007
- Country/State: England
- Number of Editions: 21 editions
- First edition Date: 2005
- Last edition Date: 2009
- Languages: British English
- Library of Congress Code: KD4902
- Dewey Code: 347.42012
- ISBN: 9781841133720 1841133728 9781841139760 1841139769 9781847313768 1847313760
- OCLC: 61528985
Main Contents
The role of courts in the protection of socio-economic rights: international and domestic perspectives
The regional protection of socio-economic rights: Europe
Courts, the UK Constitution and the Human Rights Act 1998
Judicial review: difference, resources and the Human Rights Act
From need to ‘choice’ in public services: the boundaries of judicial intervention in prioritisation disputes
Articles 3 and 8 ECHR: Failure to provide and positive obligations in the socio-economic sphere
Article 14 ECHR and the unequal distribution of public goods and services in the United Kingdom
Article 6 ECHR: Judicial review, due process and the protection of socio-economic rights.
Summary Note
This book demonstrates how boundaries of judicial intervention in socio economic disputes have been altered by the extension of judicial powers.
Structured Subjects (Headings):
- England
- Europe
- Great Britain
- Human Rights Act 1998 (Great Britain)
- Human rights
- Judicial review
- Judicial review of administrative acts
- Social rights
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