Module Information
Course Delivery
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Module Assessment Written Assignment of 5,000 words | 100% |
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
1. Display a knowledge and understanding of the underlying rationale and methodology of this area of human rights protection at the European and international levels.
2. Display a knowledge and understanding of the relationship between human rights protection and other goals and objectives within the European and international legal orders.
3. Critically evaluate and test the arguments relating to the need for such a system of legal protection and its effectiveness on the ground in the context of both economically developed European states and poorer developing countries of the Majority World.
4. Locate and evaluate the relevant literature and materials in this field and use them in critical discussion of the subject.
5. Present critical and well-informed argument relating to the establishment and development of European and international systems of human rights protection.
Brief description
This module will introduce students to the human right to an adequate standard of living as expressed in core human rights instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Traditionally, discussion of human rights to food, housing and healthcare has tended to focus primarily on the entitlements of people living in the less privileged regions of the world. Here though, in addition to addressing core elements of the broader right from the perspective of the citizens of developing countries ? such as rights to adequate food, housing and healthcare ? students will consider evolving governmental and societal attitudes to such rights from the perspective of the relatively privileged European citizen. Thus, aside from providing students with a general overview of the codification of this key economic right, and an insight into the political and economic barriers that hinder the realization of basic human entitlements to housing, food and healthcare, the syllabus also encourages students to consider the relevance of key strands of the umbrella right closer to home.
Content
- The expression of key rights in human rights law ? the human right to an `adequate standard of living? ? e.g. right to adequate food, housing and healthcare
- The interdependent nature of civil and political / economic and social rights ? why it is not realistic to draw a clear line between the traditional categories of human rights
- Minimum requirements: the `baseline? of protection ? basic needs and the reality of progressive or programmatic human rights protection
- Rights to subsistence and welfare framed in terms of negative and positive obligations and individual group rights ? the expression of rights and nature of the obligations imposed upon states.
2. International Legal instruments and the Human Right to Subsistence and Basic Welfare
- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 - overview and analysis of key provisions
- The International Covenants (on Human Rights) ? overview and analysis of key provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966 and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 1966.
3. The European Framework and Rights to Subsistence and Basic Welfare
- The European Social Charter (Revised) 1996: overview and analysis of key provisions focusing primarily on Article 11 (the right to protection of health), Article 30 (the right to protection against poverty and social exclusion) and Article 31 (the right to housing)
- The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union 2000: overview and analysis of key provisions encompassing a consideration of the notion of, and right to, human dignity and the practical value of rights such as the right to family and professional life (Article 33); the right to social security and social assistance (Article 34) and the right to healthcare (Article 35)
- European Community Law and Protection of European Citizens? Rights ? The First Pillar and economic and social well-being in the EU.
4. Rights to subsistence and basic welfare and Vulnerable Groups
- Children and the right to an adequate standard of living ? overview and analysis of key international and regional measures: (a) the rights of the child in international human rights law - the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child; (b) the European human rights framework and the rights of the child - The European Social Charter (Revised) 1996 (Articles 16 and 17) and The European Charter of Fundamental Rights 2000 (Articles 24 and 33).
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 7