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The Right to Development (RTD), a concept that
emerged in the 1970s, is one of the most debated and
contentious issues in international relations. RTD
builds on the rights based approach to development,
seeking to integrate the norms and principles of
human rights with policies and plans to promote
development. Despite its importance for the world’s
poor and dispossessed, a great deal of definitional
confusion still surrounds the concept.
This primer introduces the concept of RTD as well as
discusses its practical application in the Indian
setting. It is divided accordingly into two sections,
the first one traces the origins and the evolution of
the idea of RTD.
This section identifies the defining parameters and
content of RTD and focuses especially on the three
rights-the rights to food, education and health-that
have been identified as a ‘good starting
point’ for the implementation of RTD.
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The last chapter
in this section underscores the importance of women’s
rights in order to emphasise the need to focus on
safeguarding and promoting the human rights of
vulnerable groups.
Part II covers substantially the Indian situation
relating to RTD. The first chapter in this section
provides an overview of the legal and institutional
mechanism in India for the protection of human rights in
general and women’s rights in particular. The next
chapter examines the implementation of the rights to
food, health and education. The last chapter in this
section details the functioning of Public Interest
Litigation (PIL)-which has emerged in recent years as an
important mechanism for securing social justice-and the
challenges and limitations of the mechanism.
Providing a comprehensive, lucid and innovative
synthesis of current thinking on RTD, this book will be
of considerable interest to human rights activists,
government departments and planning agencies, and non
governmental organisations working in the fields of
development and/or human rights, while being of equal
interest to researchers in the fields of development,
human rights and law.
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