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Horizontal Rights An Institutional Approach Gautam Bhatia

  • SKU: BELL-51981780
Horizontal Rights An Institutional Approach Gautam Bhatia
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Horizontal Rights An Institutional Approach Gautam Bhatia instant download after payment.

Publisher: Hart Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.71 MB
Pages: 280
Author: Gautam Bhatia
ISBN: 9781509967612, 1509967613
Language: English
Year: 2023

Product desciption

Horizontal Rights An Institutional Approach Gautam Bhatia by Gautam Bhatia 9781509967612, 1509967613 instant download after payment.

This book provides a new conceptual model for considering constitutional rights from a comparative perspective. A prestigious club bars women from standing for executive positions. A homeowner refuses to rent their house to a person on grounds of their race. Each of these real-life cases involves the exercise of private power, which deprives individuals of their rights. Can these individuals invoke the Constitution in response? Horizontal Rights: An Institutional Approach brings a fresh perspective to these age-old, yet fraught issues. This book argues that constitutional scholarship and doctrine, across jurisdictions, has proceeded from an inarticulate premise called 'default verticality.' This is based on a set of underlying philosophical assumptions, which presumes that constitutional rights are presumptively applicable against the State, and need special justification to be applied against private parties. Departing from default verticality and its assumptions, this book argues that constitutional rights should apply horizontally between private parties where the existence of an economic, social, or cultural institution creates a difference in power between the parties, and allows one to violate the rights of the other. The institutional approach aims to be both theoretically convincing, as well as a providing a workable model for constitutional adjudication. It applies both to classic issues such as restrictive covenants, as well as cutting-edge contemporary legal problems around the regulation of platform work and the distribution of property upon divorce. This promises to be an exciting new contribution to the global conversation around constitutional rights and private power.

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