874 resultados para Social fundamental constitutional rights of health protection
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Abstract: The implementation of Fundamental Constitutional Health and Social Rights is necessary, appropriate and proportionate, following the demands of the population. Accountability and self-responsibility play a very important role. This requires the development of constitutional principles that protect public funds against corruption and offer a constitutional right to health protection. Financial and criminal liability might provide an incentive to improve the management of public funds and reinforce fundamental constitutional principles, particularly regarding the right to health. Constitutional, administrative and criminal issues, as well as public management and administration and the science of good governance, should be articulated in a single strategy also in the health sector. In Portugal and Brazil, as examples, the Federal Court / Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court / High Court of Justice or the Court of Auditors should be considered together.
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Supreme Court precedent establishes that the government may not punish children for matters beyond their control. Same-sex marriage bans and non-recognition laws (“marriage bans”) do precisely this. The states argue that marriage is good for children, yet marriage bans categorically exclude an entire class of children – children of same-sex couples – from the legal, economic and social benefits of marriage. This amicus brief recounts a powerful body of equal protection jurisprudence that prohibits punishing children to reflect moral disapproval of parental conduct or to incentivize adult behavior. We then explain that marriage bans punish children of same-sex couples because they: 1) foreclose their central legal route to family formation; 2) categorically void their existing legal parent-child relationships incident to out-of-state marriages; 3) deny them economic rights and benefits; and 4) inflict psychological and stigmatic harm. States cannot justify marriage bans as good for children and then exclude children of same-sex couples based on moral disapproval of their same-sex parents’ relationships or to incentivize opposite-sex couples to “procreate” within the bounds of marriage. To do so, severs the connection between legal burdens and individual responsibility and creates a permanent class or caste distinction.
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- describe what is meant by socioeconomic differences in health, and the social and emotional determinants of health - understand how health inequalities are affected by the social and economic circumstances that people experience throughout their lives - discuss how factors such as living and working conditions, income, place and education can impact on health - identify actions for public health policy-makers that have the potential to make a difference in improving health outcomes within populations - appreciate the concept of social cohesion and social capital, and their role as potential protective factors in health - understand conceptual models that can assist in analysing these issues.
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This amicus brief filed by Scholars of the Constitutional Rights of Children turns the spotlight on children in same-sex families. The brief enumerates the ways Section 3 of DOMA impairs children's interests by denying federal recognition of their parents' marriages.
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Item 1020.
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"Serial no. 51."
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Item 1020.
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"Serial no. 11."
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"Serial no. 21."
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Shipping list no.: 86-717-P.
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Hearings held on S. 3418, 3633, 3116, 2810, and 2542.
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Ao repensar-se a formação do educador, visando sua participação critica e consciente na sociedade, a Educação em Sa~de 6 objet6 de reflexão te6rico-metodo16gica. Assim, ã postura tradicional no ensino de sa~de - normativa, ing-ª. nua, restrita ã dimensão bio16gica, contrapõe-se atualmente a concepção de sa~dc como direito. O presente trabalho consiste em uma reflexão sobre a problemática Educação-Sa~de e Cidadania na sociedade brasileira, focalizando-se o papel da escola p~blica na co~ quista coletiva da sa~de. Reconhecendo-se a Educação como prática mediadora, que se articula dialeticamente a total i dade social, discute-se aqui as possibilidades e limites da Educação em Sa~de, no sentido de sua contribuição a melhoria da qualidade de vida e sa~de do povo brasileiro. sao analisadas, em uma perspectiva hist6rica, as tend~ncias pedag6gicas na area da Educação em Sa~de, identificando- se seus pressupostos filos6ficos e conte~do ideb l6gico; 6 tamb6~ investigada a função po1ftica exercida pc la Educação em Sa~de no contexto da formação so~ial capit~ lista. Considera-se importante que o compromisso polft! co dos educadores se concretize na compet6ncia profissio - nal, viabilizando a Escola P~blica constituir-se como esp~ ço de interpretação e transformação da realidade. Isso & algo a ser construido coletivamente, no cotidiano da escola, em condições dignas de trabalho; relaciona-se, portanto, ã uma polftica educacional de efetiva valorização da I ducação P~blica. Concluindo, enfatiza-se a importãncia da organizaçao e fortalecimento da sociedade civil para que o direi to constitucional a Sa~de e a Educação se torne uma realidade para todos os cidadãos brasileiros.
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This thesis is an attempt to explore the problems faced by Indian Women and to examine the ways in which the human rights of women could be better protected in the light of international movements with special reference to national legislation and judicial decisions.The evolution of human rights from early period to Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948 is traced in the first chapter. The second chapter deals with the evolution of human rights in India. The evolution of fundamental rights and directive principles and the role played by the Indian Judiciary in enforcing the human rights enumerated in various international instruments dealing with human rights are also dealt with in this chapter. The rights guaranteed to women under the various international documents have been dealt with in the third chapter.It is noticed that the international documents have had their impact in India leading to creation of machinery for protection of human rights. Organised violations of women's rights such as prostitution, devadasi system, domestic violence, sexual harassment at workplaces, the evil of dowry, female infanticide etc. have been analysed in the light of existing laws and decisional jurisprudence in the fourth chapter. The fifth chapter analyses the decisions and consensus that emerged from the world conferences on women and their impact on the Indian Society and Judiciary. The constitutional provisions and legislative provisions protecting the rights of women have been critically examined in the sixth chapter. Chapter seven deals with various mechanisms evolved to protect the human rights of women. The eighth chapter contains conclusions and suggestions.