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The right to Social Security in the European Constitutions

Data publikacji: 2016

Studia z Zakresu Prawa Pracy i Polityki Społecznej (Studies on Labour Law and Social Policy), 2016, Vol. 23, s. 141 - 150

Autorzy

Eberhard Eichenhofer
Uniwersytet Friedricha Schillera w Jenie, 07737 Jena, Niemcy
Wszystkie publikacje autora →

Tytuły

The right to Social Security in the European Constitutions

Abstrakt

In the Basic Law (“Grundgesetz”) – the German Constitution – a special and coherent catalogue of social human rights is not foreseen. Only a few social rights’ guarantees primarily as to women, mothers, children and handicapped persons are explicitly stipulated. Therefore, in the current German legal thought social human rights are regarded as neither fundamental, nor integral parts of human rights. As the full spectrum of human rights acknowledged in international law, among them above all the basic social human rights to work, education, health, accommodation, social security or social assistance (Articles 22-26 UDHR), does not correspond to the far more restricted catalogue of human rights explicitly figured out in the Basic Law as fundamental rights (“Grundrechte”), the doctrine argues even more that due to their very legal nature social human rights could not and never exist.

Bibliografia


Informacje

Informacje: Studia z Zakresu Prawa Pracy i Polityki Społecznej (Studies on Labour Law and Social Policy), 2016, Vol. 23, s. 141 - 150

Typ artykułu: Oryginalny artykuł naukowy

Tytuły:

Polski:

The right to Social Security in the European Constitutions

Angielski:

The right to Social Security in the European Constitutions

Autorzy

Uniwersytet Friedricha Schillera w Jenie, 07737 Jena, Niemcy

Publikacja: 2016

Status artykułu: Otwarte __T_UNLOCK

Licencja: Żadna

Udział procentowy autorów:

Eberhard Eichenhofer (Autor) - 100%

Korekty artykułu:

-

Języki publikacji:

Angielski

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Liczba pobrań: 773