With its separate articles and as a collection, this Special Issue, titled Human Rights and Leisure: Welfare, Wellbeing and Social Justice, demonstrates the sociological importance of a committed, critical and inter-disciplinary study of the human rights/ leisure nexus across a diversity of contexts. This collection of articles, we argue, represents an important marker in the field of leisure studies which, over the last decades, has seen renewed interest and debates surrounding the need to human rights proof leisure contexts, spaces and access.For contextual purposes, and as an important starting point, it should be highlighted here that the right to participate in leisure is enshrined by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) from 1948 which, essentially, establishes a right to leisure and cultural participation. As Article 24 states: 'Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay' (UDHR, 1948). Meanwhile, Article 27, intends to ensure that: 'Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits' (UDHR, 1948).Despite this and other international frameworks of human rights that are of relevance to leisure, however, it was noted by Veal (2015) that the study of human rights had yet to fully permeate the field of leisure studies and, more broadly, sociology. Whilst this is not to say that the human rights/leisure nexus is yet to be covered by academics (