
The Constitutionalization of Human Rights Law analyses how lawyers representing refugees use human rights provisions in national constitutions to close the gap between the Law and it's implementation. Focusing on five countries (Colombia, Mexico, South Africa, Uganda, the United States) the book examines how lawyers adapt creatively to social, political, and legal contexts. Many refugee-receiving states openly reject or passively ignore their obligation under international law to protect refugees. For this reason, cause lawyers (those who use the law to empower others) have turned to constitutionalized human rights law. While many countries likely included such provisions in their constitutions without intending to fulfil their commitments, cause lawyers have seized on them as a more enforceable means of rights protection.This book theorizes a continuum of ever-more ambitious methods through which cause lawyers use constitutionalized human rights law to benefit refugees. Lawyers use different tools as they move along this continuum, including strategic litigation, training governmental officials in the applicable law, and various forms of informal advocacy. It makes important contributions to three strands of socio-legal literature. As to the effectiveness of human rights treaties, it provides qualitative evidence of how such treaties achieve greater significance when incorporated into national constitutions. As to refugee law, it analyses how international protections for refugees become stronger when domestic lawyers enforce them through national constitutions. And as to cause lawyering, it shows how refugee lawyers use constitutionalized human rights law to protect their clients.
This book investigates how legal practitioners leverage constitutional human rights provisions to bridge the divide between international refugee protections and their practical domestic implementation. Author Stephen Meili, a scholar of socio-legal studies, examines the strategic adaptation of cause lawyers across five distinct national jurisdictions. By analyzing the shift from international treaty reliance to constitutional enforcement, the work presents a theoretical continuum of advocacy methods used to secure refugee rights in states that often ignore international obligations.
What You Will Find
Legal scholars and practitioners identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of cause lawyering and the domestic application of international human rights law. The text is noted for its clear, evidence-based approach to complex socio-legal phenomena, making it a valuable resource for those studying the intersection of constitutional law and refugee advocacy.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019886843X
ISBN-13:
9780198868439
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