Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies

Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === Judicial remedies are, amongst others, a vehicle through which respect, protection, promotion and fulfilment of human rights can be delivered to those who need them. A remedy is the perspective from which litigants judge either the success or failure of judicial decisio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mbazira, Christopher
Other Authors: De Vos, Pierre F.
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2323
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-23232017-08-02T04:00:08Z Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies Mbazira, Christopher De Vos, Pierre F. Faculty of Law Remedies (Law) South Africa Public law Human rights Philosophiae Doctor - PhD Judicial remedies are, amongst others, a vehicle through which respect, protection, promotion and fulfilment of human rights can be delivered to those who need them. A remedy is the perspective from which litigants judge either the success or failure of judicial decisions. Judicial remedies make the rights whole, they complete the justiciability of human rights because without them human rights remain statements of legal rhetoric. The nature of the remedies that the courts grant is not only based on the normative nature of the rights they seek to enforce. They are also influenced by factors such as the goals and objectives of judicial remedies as defined, amongst others, by the ethos of either corrective or distributive forms of justice. This thesis explored these factors and their impact on judicial remedies. Stress is put on the impact of the separation of powers doctrine, institutional competence concerns and on the forms of justice pursued by courts. The study is based on the judicial enforcement of the socio-economic rights protected in the South African 1996 Constitution. The research undertaken here was intended to guide scholars, legal practitioners and judicial officers who confront socio-economic rights issues as part of their daily work. South Africa 2013-10-24T09:04:05Z 2009/10/05 16:03 2009/10/05 2013-10-24T09:04:05Z 2007 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2323 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Remedies (Law)
South Africa
Public law
Human rights
spellingShingle Remedies (Law)
South Africa
Public law
Human rights
Mbazira, Christopher
Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
description Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === Judicial remedies are, amongst others, a vehicle through which respect, protection, promotion and fulfilment of human rights can be delivered to those who need them. A remedy is the perspective from which litigants judge either the success or failure of judicial decisions. Judicial remedies make the rights whole, they complete the justiciability of human rights because without them human rights remain statements of legal rhetoric. The nature of the remedies that the courts grant is not only based on the normative nature of the rights they seek to enforce. They are also influenced by factors such as the goals and objectives of judicial remedies as defined, amongst others, by the ethos of either corrective or distributive forms of justice. This thesis explored these factors and their impact on judicial remedies. Stress is put on the impact of the separation of powers doctrine, institutional competence concerns and on the forms of justice pursued by courts. The study is based on the judicial enforcement of the socio-economic rights protected in the South African 1996 Constitution. The research undertaken here was intended to guide scholars, legal practitioners and judicial officers who confront socio-economic rights issues as part of their daily work. === South Africa
author2 De Vos, Pierre F.
author_facet De Vos, Pierre F.
Mbazira, Christopher
author Mbazira, Christopher
author_sort Mbazira, Christopher
title Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
title_short Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
title_full Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
title_fullStr Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
title_full_unstemmed Enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the South African Constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
title_sort enforcing the economic, social and cultural rights in the south african constitution as justicable individual rights: the role of judicial remedies
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2323
work_keys_str_mv AT mbazirachristopher enforcingtheeconomicsocialandculturalrightsinthesouthafricanconstitutionasjusticableindividualrightstheroleofjudicialremedies
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