Bounded political contestation: the domestic translation of international health and housing rights in Australia |
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Authors: | Russell Solomon |
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Institution: | School of Global Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia |
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Abstract: | Political contestation within liberal democratic states is an important, albeit limited, guide in defining how these states domestically implement their international human rights obligations. While often ritualistically endorsing human rights standards, political actors allow themselves a limited policy space with their domestic political contest circumscribed by more pervasive influences, often at odds with the state's international commitments. This article examines recent health and housing policy initiatives by Australia's two major political parties and assesses them against its international commitments. Applying a social constructivist approach, this article argues that the dominant neoliberal political discourse and the state's institutional structure set contextual boundaries to the parties’ policy contestation and reveal the limited influence of domestic political contestation in determining Australia's rights implementation. |
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Keywords: | Liberal democracy economic and social rights social constructivist approach neoliberalism |
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