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  1. Social protections crucial for older persons, persons with disabilities, youth. Social pensions are a critical element of the right to social security for older persons whose human rights enjoyment is endangered without an adequate social pension. Older women are especially at risk. They live longer, and the unpaid care work they perform ...

  2. May 25, 2023 · More recent international human rights law instruments recognize a right to social protection, in addition to and as distinct from, the right to social security. For example, a recent protocol to ...

  3. ontrol of people with care and support needs have been divided into two types:Those where the person has an impairment of their mind or brain, and ther. are questions over their capacity to make decisions relevant to their safety.Those where the person has no impairment of their mind or brain, but where the lev.

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  4. Aug 24, 2019 · This is just one example of ‘cases in which a right is in question but for which no judge can be appointed to render a decision’ (6:234). Footnote 11 Yet on Kant’s official view, there should be no such cases, since the relationship between right and coercion is analytic, they are the political equivalent of meeting a real-life married ...

    • Benjamin L. McKean
    • 2019
  5. Jan 22, 2021 · Abstract. According to much of self-labelled coercion theory, the state is both the ground of egalitarian demands of distributive justice, and the (sole) domain to which such demands apply, in virtue of its exercise of coercive power which only distributive equality can justify. This article argues that, when properly unpacked in its ...

    • Miriam Ronzoni
    • 2021
  6. Dec 22, 2017 · This special issue of the International Social Security Review considers the international policy priority of social security coverage extension, and does so from the important perspective of the realization of the human right to social security. Our point of departure is the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948.

  7. Authority differs from coercion in being fundamentally a collective or social construct. Although the social meaning of coercion may vary, as do the social norms governing its use, the physical ability to impose violence on another exists independently of the self-understanding of the actors themselves.

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