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Intersectionality and Human Rights Law

✍ Scribed by Shreya Atrey; Peter Dunne (editors)


Publisher
Hart Publishing
Year
2020
Tongue
English
Leaves
203
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This collection of essays analyses how the diversity in human identity and disadvantage affects the articulation, realisation, violation and enforcement of human rights. The question arises from the realisation that people who are severally and severely disadvantaged because of their race, religion, gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, class etc, often find themselves at the margins of human rights; their condition seldom improved and sometimes even worsened by the rights discourse. How does one make sense of this relationship between the complexity of people’s disadvantage and violation of their human rights? Does the human rights discourse, based on its universal and common values, have tools, methods or theories to capture and respond to the difference in people’s lived experience of rights? Can intersectionality help in that quest? This book seeks to inaugurate this line of inquiry.

✦ Table of Contents


Foreword
Acknowledgements
Contents
List of Contributors
Table of Cases
Table of Statutes
Introduction: Intersectionality from Equality to Human Rights
1. Beyond Universality: An Intersectional Justification of Human Rights
Introduction
I. Universality
II. Non-discrimination
III. Intersectionality
Conclusion
2. Harnessing the Full Potential of Intersectionality Theory in International Human Rights Law Lessons from Disabled Children’s Right to Education
Introduction
I. Retracing Intersectionality inInternational Human Rights Law
II. Disabled Children in Education
Conclusion
3. The Potential and Pitfalls of Intersectionality in the Context of Social Rights Adjudication
Introduction
I. The Ambitions of Intersectionality
II. The Emerging Intersectional Dimension to Human Rights Jurisprudence
III. Intersectionality and Social Rights
IV. What Intersectionality Contributes to Social Rights Adjudication: The Complex Interface between Poverty, Material Inequality and Identity Discrimination
V. The Risks of Intersectionality When Applied in the Context of Social Rights Adjudication
Conclusion
4. The Right to Education and Substantive Equality: An Intersectional Reading
Introduction
I. Education: An Unequal Right
II. Substantive Equality and the Right to Education: An Intersectional Analysis
III. Separate Trajectories: The US Approach
IV. South Africa
V. Engendering Intersectionality:Excluding Pregnant Learners
Conclusion
5. Class, Intersectionality, the Right to Housing and the Avoidable Tragedy of Grenfell Tower
Introduction
I. Class Discrimination: An Indefinable Concept or a Term Capable of Definition?
II. Class, Socio-economic Rights and the Right to Adequate Housing
Conclusion
6. Intersectionality, Repeal and Reproductive Rights in Ireland
Introduction
I. Repeal: The Referendum
II. The Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) Act 2018 and Incomplete Reproductive Justice
III. The Referendum Form and Failures of Intersectional Praxis
7. The Distance Between Us: Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights of Rural Women and Girls
Introduction
I. Rurality Matters for Gender Equality
II. Recognising the Significant Role of Rural Women
III. The CEDAW Committee and Gendered Rurality
Conclusion
Epilogue
Index


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