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Contribution to Book
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Beyond Progressivity
Contributions to Books
  • Tara J. Melish, University at Buffalo School of Law
Description

Published as Chapter 19 in Social Rights Jurisprudence: Emerging Trends in Comparative and International Law, Malcolm Langford, ed.

This book chapter critically assesses the emerging social rights jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights as it has developed to date. It describes the normative framework over which the Court exercises jurisdiction, the complaints procedure it oversees, and the legal obligations that OAS member states assume with respect to the protected rights enshrined in the region's instruments. It then assesses four of the normative axes on which the Court has jurisprudentially relied in protecting social rights and looks to the Court's rich jurisprudence on reparation and supervision of compliance with its decisions. The chapter concludes that the Court's social rights jurisprudence is commendable and requires expansion, but doing so will require the reversal of two troubling, closely-related trends that currently limit the vast potential of the Court to provide full and effective protection for all human rights.

Publication Date
1-19-2009
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISBN
9780521860949
Keywords
  • international adjudication,
  • human rights,
  • supranational tribunals,
  • inter-American system,
  • social rights,
  • cultural rights,
  • economic rights,
  • justiciability rules
Comments
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Citation Information
Tara J. Melish, The Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Beyond Progressivity in Social Rights Jurisprudence: Emerging Trends in Comparative and International Law 372 (Malcolm Langford, ed., Cambridge University Press 2008)