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The "Right to Live": Civil Legal Services and Human Rights
The
right to income support--called, in international human rights law,
“social security”--is perhaps the most basic of human rights and is at
the heart of advocacy on behalf of low-income clients. Founders of the
movement for civil legal services for the poor, closely linked in its
early days to the welfare rights movement that was vibrant then,
strategized about achieving recognition of a “constitutional right to
live.” After U.S. Supreme Court decisions cut short that effort,
advocacy turned to the state level. As economic hardship deepens for
clients, a human rights focus offers new tools for achieving a right to
social security.
Copies of this article are available for individual purchase online for $15 apiece.
Related Articles
- Gillian MacNaughton, Human Rights Frameworks, Strategies, and Tools for the Poverty Lawyer’s Toolbox (Jan.–Feb. 2011)
- Martha F. Davis, Human Rights in the Trenches: Using International Human Rights Law in “Everyday” Legal Aid Cases (Nov.-Dec. 2007)
