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Right to Development in International Law: The Case of Pakistan


ISBN13: 9780415479417
Published: July 2009
Publisher: Routledge-Cavendish
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00
Paperback edition , ISBN13 9780415631617



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This book contains a rigorous exploration of the right to development in international law. The volume draws on a wide range of relevant sources to analyze the legal status of international cooperation in contemporary international law, before going on to explore the domestic application of the right to development looking at the example of Pakistan, a country that is undergoing radical transformation in terms of its internal governance structures and the challenges it faces for enforcing the rule of law.

Through focusing on Pakistan the book links international perspectives and the international human rights framework with the domestic constitutional apparatus for enforcing the right to development within that jurisdiction. In doing so, Khurshid Iqbal argues that the right to development may be promoted through existing constitutional mechanisms if fundamental rights are widely interpreted by the superior courts, effectively implemented by the lower courts and if Shari'ah law is progressively interpreted in public interest.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
1. Introduction
Part 1: The Concept and Challenges of the Right to Development
2. The History, Politics and the Concept of the Right To Development
3. The Jurisprudence of the Right To Development
4. The Declaration and the Working Groups
Part 2: The Right to Development in International Law
4. The Legal Status of the Right To Development in Public International Law
Part 3: The Right to Development in Pakistan
6. The Nature and Extent of the Realisation of the Right to Development in Pakistan
7. Re-conceptualising the RTD in Islamic Law
8. Pakistan's Poverty Reduction and the Right to Development
9. Conclusion