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The social constitution: socio-economic rights and the welfare state in South Africa
Publié le 22 novembre 2024
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Mis à jour le 4 décembre 2024
Date(s)
le 12 décembre 2024
14h
Lieu(x)
Bâtiment Simone Veil (F)
Salle 141
Conférence donnée par Stuart Wilson, Juge à la High Court de Johannesburg, et précédent Executive Director du Socio-economic Rights Institute of South Africa.
Organisée en partenariat avec le Centre de Recherches Anglophones (CREA).
Résumé de la conférence (qui se tiendra en anglais):
Cass Sunstein called the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 the “the most admirable constitution in the history of the world”. The South African Constitution is often praised for its broad dissemination of political power and for its recognition of social and economic rights. However, the years since its adoption have coincided with greater inequality and the systemic weakening of the South African state through corruption and bureaucratic malaise. Thomas Piketty says that land reform has been abandoned, and Samuel Moyn cites South Africa’s adoption of socio-economic rights as evidence for his thesis that rights cannot bring about greater economic equality. In light of all this, is the South African Constitution really all that admirable? In my talk, I want to suggest that it is, but in in ways that have been overlooked. I want to argue that the Constitution has arrested deepening poverty, largely through encouraging expanded access to land, healthcare and social security. It is true that, in common with every other significant legal system throughout the world, the Constitution has not yet been able to restructure the economic relationships that have deepened inequality under late capitalism. But I have reason to think it might yet contribute to that sort of endeavour, at least by limiting the extent to which the South African state is permitted to manage the economy through resort to destructive programmes of austerity.
Organisée en partenariat avec le Centre de Recherches Anglophones (CREA).
Résumé de la conférence (qui se tiendra en anglais):
Cass Sunstein called the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 the “the most admirable constitution in the history of the world”. The South African Constitution is often praised for its broad dissemination of political power and for its recognition of social and economic rights. However, the years since its adoption have coincided with greater inequality and the systemic weakening of the South African state through corruption and bureaucratic malaise. Thomas Piketty says that land reform has been abandoned, and Samuel Moyn cites South Africa’s adoption of socio-economic rights as evidence for his thesis that rights cannot bring about greater economic equality. In light of all this, is the South African Constitution really all that admirable? In my talk, I want to suggest that it is, but in in ways that have been overlooked. I want to argue that the Constitution has arrested deepening poverty, largely through encouraging expanded access to land, healthcare and social security. It is true that, in common with every other significant legal system throughout the world, the Constitution has not yet been able to restructure the economic relationships that have deepened inequality under late capitalism. But I have reason to think it might yet contribute to that sort of endeavour, at least by limiting the extent to which the South African state is permitted to manage the economy through resort to destructive programmes of austerity.
Mis à jour le 04 décembre 2024