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Human Development &
Capability Association

Agency, Well-Being and Justice

Archivo por meses: June 2014

JHDC Special Issue on Health and Disability – Call for Papers

The Journal of Human Development and Capabilities announces a special issue on Health and Disability, with guest editors Jennifer Prah Ruger and Sophie Mitra. The call for papers is attached here.
For inquiries, please contact Sophie Mitra (mitra@fordham.edu) or Jennifer Prah Ruger (jenpr@upenn.edu).

The Deadline for submissions extended to December 31, 2014.

JHDC Special Issue on Health and Disability – Call for Papers

The Journal of Human Development and Capabilities announces a special issue on Health and Disability, with guest editors Jennifer Prah Ruger and Sophie Mitra. The call for papers is attached here.
For inquiries, please contact Sophie Mitra (mitra@fordham.edu) or Jennifer Prah Ruger (jenpr@upenn.edu).

The Deadline for submissions has been extended to December 31, 2014.

Free Workshop – The Capabilities Approach & Law

A workshop organised by Law & Social Justice

University of Leeds

9th July 2014. The Moot Court - The Liberty Building

The Capabilities Approach proposed by Amartya Sen and others, notably Martha Nussbaum, is recognised as the most comprehensive normative language that we have for developing social interventions aimed at improving people's lives. It has as its central characteristic a focus on what people are effectively able to be and do. It is argued that well-being and justice are best conceptualised in terms of people's effective opportunities to undertake the activities that they want to engage in, and be whom they want to be. The approach has been highly influential in low income countries as a means of measuring and promoting development. In the last decade scholars have begun to explore its relevance to issues facing high income countries. However, whilst prominent in development studies, economics, philosophy, and health sciences, amongst other disciplines, legal scholars have been tentative in exploring the utility of this theoretical framework, notwithstanding the significance of law's potential role in social change agendas. Challenging law's reticence, this workshop brings together an interdisciplinary group of scholars with the aim of assessing and exploring the utility of the approach across different areas of law and policy.

The full programme is available at: http://www.law.leeds.ac.uk/events/2014/the-capabilities-approach-law

It is free to attend but places are limited. Please reserve your place by emailing Michael Thomson: m.a.thomson@leeds.ac.uk

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