Publication
Title
Equality restricted : the problematic compatibility between austerity measures and human rights law
Author
Abstract
Economic policies that concentrate wealth and aggravate socioeconomic inequalities often have negative impacts on human rights. For example, evidence points to the unequal impact of austerity measuressuch as the defunding and privatizing of health care-on already disadvantaged groups and individuals. Despite its detrimental impacts, austerity often appears as a necessary evil in times when difficult choices must be made. Justified through arguments of trickle-down economics to support growth, the realization of human rights is postponed. Human rights are sidelined as guidelines that inform rather than limit such measures. The assumption that wealth concentration and the consequent reduction of human rights standards may be justified suggests a problematic conception of equality in human rights law. In this paper, I critically examine the way that this assumption informs the exclusion of distributive considerations from the scope of equality within human rights law. I identify and evaluate the emerging interpretations of equality beyond the legal-technical notion of equal treatment and the prohibition of discrimination and the extent to which equality in human rights may take on a distributive function in combating policies of wealth concentration such as austerity.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Health and human rights
Publication
2023
Volume/pages
25 :2 (2023) , p. 177-189
ISI
001131999200017
Pubmed ID
38145138
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Equality beyond non-discrimination: redefining the boundaries of human rights law before socio-economic inequality.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 01.02.2024
Last edited 07.02.2024
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