
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Contesting Socio-Economic Rights: Means and Ends Contesting Socio-Economic Rights: Means and Ends
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Constitution-Making and Amending Constitution-Making and Amending
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Socio-Economic Rights and Judicial Review Socio-Economic Rights and Judicial Review
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Prospects from Below Prospects from Below
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Bibliography Bibliography
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33 Gender Quotas in Ireland: A First for Proportional Representation by the Single Transferable Vote
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3 C3Economic and Social Rights in Ireland
Get accessDr Thomas Murray, Higher Education Lead and Programme Director, An Cosán Virtual Community College
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Published:11 August 2021
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Abstract
This chapter examines the law and politics of contesting economic and social rights in Ireland. Civil society mobilizations for the constitutional recognition of socio-economic rights provoke disagreement about the feasibility, legitimacy, and effectiveness of using such rights to de-commodify labour and social reproduction. The chapter situates these debates in their socio-legal context. It examines why state actors have opposed socio-economic rights in the past, and why enhanced constitutional protection of such rights will not radically alter structural inequalities today. At best, public interest litigation may prompt the political system to address the needs of minority groups in highly specific instances. Internationally, contemporary constitution-making experiments advance alternative models of socio-economic rights enforcement more decisively premised on social solidarity. Any similar realization of economic and social rights in Ireland will likely depend on civil society capacities to foster the requisite political will for social solidarity and constitutional change.
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