The Convention on the Rights of the Child has changed the paradigm of how (human rights) law looks at children: from âobjectsâ of protection to full rights-holders of all human rights. Consequently, social rights are not voluntary welfare services but an expression of the dignity and rights of the child. In Social Rights of Children in Europe Katharina Häusler provides a thorough analysis of how these basic social rights are interpreted by the three major human rights bodies on the level of the Council of Europe and the European Union. It thus offers not only an excellent picture of the main lines of interpretation but also of the major gaps and challenges for the realisation of childrenâs social rights in Europe.
Katharina Häusler, (Dr.iur., University of Vienna) is working as trainee lawyer in Vienna. She has been researching and publishing in various fields of Human Rights and Public International Law, including Childrenâs Rights and the European Union & Human Rights.
Everybody concerned with childrenâs rights and their implementation. It will be of relevance for future research in this field but also for practitioners (e.g. civil servants, judges, lawyers) or policy-makers.