Comparative Perspectives on the Right to Education for Minorities and Disadvantaged Groups
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Köp båda 2 för 1345 krSandra Fredman is Rhodes Professor of the Laws of the British Commonwealth and the USA at Oxford University. She is a QC and Fellow of the British Academy. She has acted as an expert adviser on equality law and labour legislation in the EU, Northern Ireland, the UK, India, South Africa, Canada and the UN; and founded the Oxford Human Rights Hub, of which she is the Director. She has written and published widely on anti-discrimination law, human rights law and labour law. Meghan Campbell is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Birmingham and Deputy-Director of the Oxford Human Rights Hub. She holds a DPhil from Oxford University. Her forthcoming monograph Women, Poverty and Equality: The Role of CEDAW (Hart Publishing) investigates how the preeminent treaty on womens rights can addresses gender-based poverty. She has lectured on human rights, labour, administrative and constitutional law and worked as a consultant for the International Labour Organization. Helen Taylor studied BA Honours (English Literature) and LLB at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, before coming to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. Her DPhil research considers the role of courts in crafting remedies for enforcing the states positive duties in human rights. Helen is the Research Director at the Oxford Human Rights Hub, working extensively on projects relating to the right to education. She was also member of the executive committee of Oxford Pro Bono Publico.
Foreword ~ Kishore Singh Introduction ~ Sandra Fredman, Meghan Campbell and Helen Taylor Part I: The role of public and private actors in education Public rights and private schools: state accountability for violations of rights in education ~ Conor OMahony The dynamics of regulating low-fee private schools in Kenya ~ Gilbert Mitullah Omware Education at the margins: the potential benefits of private educational initiatives for disadvantaged groups ~ Melanie Smuts Part II: Balancing the right to freedom of religion and culture and the right to education Calling the farce on minority schools ~ Jayna Kothari The challenge of Afrikaans language rights in South African education ~ Michael Bishop Part III: Gender equality in education: moving beyond access to primary education Women and education: the right to substantive equality ~ Sandra Fredman Equality and the right to education: lets talk about sex education ~ Meghan Campbell Part IV: Litigating for quality and equality in education Conceptualising and enforcing the right to quality education for minorities and disadvantaged groups: reflections of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity litigation ~ Helen Taylor From the classroom to the courtroom: litigating education rights in South Africa ~ Jason Brickhill and Yana van Leeve Human rights and equality in education: Conclusion ~ Sandra Fredman, Meghan Campbell and Helen Taylor