Socio-economic rights and women in South Africa: nothing but a handful of feathers?
Abstract
The Bill of Rights contained within South Africa’s Constitution features a number of ‘socioeconomic
rights’. Although these rights are justiciable they are subject to various limitations. They
generally entail a positive onus on the part of the state to provide some good – not immediately,
but ‘progressively’. Women have a direct interest in the realization of these rights and, where
given effect to, they should exert a positive developmental impact. Some authorities are, however,
of the opinion that socio-economic rights are not really enforceable. This article contends that the
provision of social goods, by the state, should be the concomitant of the disciplined
implementation of policy. Delivery should not therefore be contingent upon the legalistic vagaries
of the human rights environment.