Legal Enforcement of Social Rights: Enabling Conditions and Impact Assessment

16 Pages Posted: 26 Jan 2010

See all articles by Siri Gloppen

Siri Gloppen

Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI); University of Bergen - Department of Comparative Politics

Date Written: December 15, 2009

Abstract

This article commends the concise and useful analysis of courts and the legal enforcement of economic, social and cultural rights given in Christian Courtis’ book, Courts and the Legal Enforcement of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Comparative Experiences of Justiciability. Yet, in order to complete the picture, a broader analysis of the enabling conditions for litigation and of the social and political impact of judicial activity in this field is required. There are a number of reasons why attempts to litigate economic, social and cultural rights may not result in judicial enforcement and why, even if enforcement is achieved in formal terms, this may not necessarily protect or fulfill the right in practice. Even when compliance is secured in terms of individuals, this may be insignificant or even detrimental to the realisation of the right from a societal perspective. While not dismissing a constructive role for courts in the enforcement of economic, social and cultural rights, it is crucial to investigate carefully who benefits from court enforcement and under what circumstances judicial enforcement is likely to advance the broader realisation of the rights and benefit those whose rights are most at risk. Assessing empirically the impact of social rights litigation is challenging and has rarely been done in a systematic fashion, but this article suggests ways in which this can be pursued.

Keywords: justiciability, economic social cultural rights

Suggested Citation

Gloppen, Siri and Gloppen, Siri, Legal Enforcement of Social Rights: Enabling Conditions and Impact Assessment (December 15, 2009). Erasmus Law Review, Vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 465-480, 2009, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1542681

Siri Gloppen (Contact Author)

University of Bergen - Department of Comparative Politics ( email )

Christiesgate 15
Bergen, N-5007
Norway

Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI) ( email )

P.O.Box 6033 Bedriftssenteret
N-5892 Bergen, 5006
Norway

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
419
Abstract Views
2,393
Rank
128,183
PlumX Metrics