This book will appeal to a range of constitutional and public legal scholars and practitioners, and audiences of human rights practice, and those following legal theory. The book presents a breakthrough in constitutional argument about economic and social rights, long debated in constitutional rights scholarship and public law. It provides an important collection of comparative developments, new analytical constructs, and contemporary developments in rights
theory. Dawing upon on comparative constitutional law it informs and develops debates in international human rights law, demonstrating how new approaches to interpretation, enforcement, adjudication,
justiciability, and deliberation may advance international and transnational human rights advocacy, argument, and reasoning.