No. , August 2019
Index
- Preliminary notes - index
- Editors’ Introduction: Law and Poverty Colloquium Special Edition
- The Role of the Constitution in the Struggle against Poverty
- Social Exclusion, Global Poverty, and Scales of (In)Justice: Rethinking Law and Poverty in a Globalizing World
- The Legal Construction of Poverty: Gender, 'Work' and the 'Social Contract'
- Not Purpose-made! Transformative Constitutionalism, Postindependence Constitutionalism and the Struggle to Eradicate Poverty
- De-Politicising Poverty: Arendt in South Africa
- Representing the Poor: Law, Poverty and Democracy
- Transformative Constitutionalism in a Democratic Developmental State
- The Potential and Limits of an Equal Rights Paradigm in Addressing Poverty
- Gendered Transformation in South African Jurisprudence: Poor Women and the Constitutional Court
- Judicial Deference and Democracy in Socio-Economic Rights Cases in South Africa
- Narrowing the Band: Reasonableness Review in Administrative Justice and Socio-Economic Rights Jurisprudence in South Africa
- Taking Poverty Seriously: The South African Constitutional Court and Socio-Economic Rights
- An Appraisal of International Law Mechanisms for Litigating Socio-Economic Rights, with a Particular Focus on the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the African Commission and Court
- Liberal Constitutionalism, Property Rights, and the Assault on Poverty
- Farm Land and Tenure Security: New Policy and Legislative Developments
- Conceptualising “Meaningful Engagement” as a Deliberative Democratic Partnership
- Rental Housing as Adequate Housing
- Constitutional Perspectives on Unemployment Security and a Right to Work in South Africa
- Privatisation of the Commons: Water as a Right; Water as a Commodity
- Tensions Between Vernacular Values that Prioritise Basic Needs and State Versions of Customary Law that Contradict Them
- Developing the Common Law of Contract in the Light of Poverty and Illiteracy: The Challenge of the Constitution
- Concluding Reflections: Legal Activism after Poverty has been Declared Unconstitutional