Criticism of the European Court of Human Rights : shifting the convention system : counter-dynamics at the National and EU level /
Criticism of the European Court of Human Rights : shifting the convention system : counter-dynamics at the National and EU level /
Patricia Popelier, Sarah Lambrecht, Koen Lemmens (eds.).
- Cambridge Intersentia 2016
- xxi, 571 pages: 25 cm
- Law and cosmopolitan values ; 9 .
- Law and cosmopolitan values ; 9. .
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2018).
Includes bibliographical references.
Criticising the European Court of Human Rights or misunderstanding the dynamics of human rights protection? / European Union : the EU's attitude toward the ECHR / Austria : endorsing the convention system, endorsing the constitution / Belgium : faithful, obedient, and just a little irritated / Czech Republic : Strasbourg case law undisputed / Germany : the long way of integrating the Strasbourg perspective into the protection of fundamental rights / Italy : between constitutional openess and resistance / Poland : the taming of the shrew / Sweden : European Court of Human Rights endorsement with some reservations / France : "je t'aime, moi non plus" / Hungary : 'gains and losses' : changing the relationship with the European Court of Human Rights / The Netherlands : political dynamics, institutional robustness / Norway : new constitutionalism, new counter-dynamics? / Switzerland : the substitute constitution in times of popular dissent / Turkey : the European Convention on Human Rights as a tool for modernisation / The United Kingdom : from Strasbourg surrogacy towards a British Bill of Rights? / Russia : in quest for a European identity / Assessing the existence of criticism of the European Court of Human Rights / Patricia Popelier, Sarah Lambrecht, and Koen Lemmens -- Koen Lemmens -- Clara Raucchegger and Sarah Lambrecht -- Anna Gamper -- Patricia Popelier -- L'ubom�ir Majer�c�ik -- Katharina Pabel -- Giuseppe Martinico -- Krystyna Kowalik-Ba�nczyk -- Henrik Wenander -- Katarzyna Blay-Grabarczyk and Christophe Maubernard -- Eszter Polg�ari -- Janneke Gerards -- Michael Reiertsen -- Tilmann Altwicker -- Olgun Akbulut -- Roger Masterman -- Aaron Matta and Armen Mazmanyan -- Sarah Lambrecht. Introduction : purpose and structure, categorisation of states and hypotheses /
For some time now, the European Court of Human Rights is under substantial pressure. From a case overload crisis it stumbled into a legitimacy crisis with regard to certain countries. This should be taken seriously, since scholars warn that institutions with eroding legitimacy risk demise or reform. The goal of this volume is to explore how widespread this critical attitude of the European Court of Human Rights really is. It also assesses to what extent such criticism is being translated in strategies at the political level or at the judicial level and brings about concrete changes in the dynamics between national and European fundamental rights protection. The book is topical and innovative, as these questions have so far remained largely unexplored, especially cross-nationally.Far from focusing exclusively on those voices that are currently raised so loud, conclusions are based on comparative in-depth reports, covering fifteen Contracting Parties and the EU.With contributions of Olgun Akbulut, Tilmann Altwicker, Katarzyna Blay-Grabarczyk, Anna Gamper, Janneke Gerards, Krystyna Kowalik-Banczyk, Sarah Lambrecht, Koen Lemmens, Lubomir Majerc�ik, Giuseppe Martinico, Roger Masterman, Aaron Matta, Christophe Maubernard, Armen Mazmanyan, Katharina Pabel, Eszter Polg�ari, Patricia Popelier, Clara Rauchegger, Michael Reiertsen and Henrik Wenander.
9781780685175 1780685173 1780684010 9781780684017
European Court of Human Rights.
European Court of Human Rights.
Civil rights--Europe.
Civil rights.
Europe.
Electronic books.
KJC5138 / .C75 2016
341.4/8094
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2018).
Includes bibliographical references.
Criticising the European Court of Human Rights or misunderstanding the dynamics of human rights protection? / European Union : the EU's attitude toward the ECHR / Austria : endorsing the convention system, endorsing the constitution / Belgium : faithful, obedient, and just a little irritated / Czech Republic : Strasbourg case law undisputed / Germany : the long way of integrating the Strasbourg perspective into the protection of fundamental rights / Italy : between constitutional openess and resistance / Poland : the taming of the shrew / Sweden : European Court of Human Rights endorsement with some reservations / France : "je t'aime, moi non plus" / Hungary : 'gains and losses' : changing the relationship with the European Court of Human Rights / The Netherlands : political dynamics, institutional robustness / Norway : new constitutionalism, new counter-dynamics? / Switzerland : the substitute constitution in times of popular dissent / Turkey : the European Convention on Human Rights as a tool for modernisation / The United Kingdom : from Strasbourg surrogacy towards a British Bill of Rights? / Russia : in quest for a European identity / Assessing the existence of criticism of the European Court of Human Rights / Patricia Popelier, Sarah Lambrecht, and Koen Lemmens -- Koen Lemmens -- Clara Raucchegger and Sarah Lambrecht -- Anna Gamper -- Patricia Popelier -- L'ubom�ir Majer�c�ik -- Katharina Pabel -- Giuseppe Martinico -- Krystyna Kowalik-Ba�nczyk -- Henrik Wenander -- Katarzyna Blay-Grabarczyk and Christophe Maubernard -- Eszter Polg�ari -- Janneke Gerards -- Michael Reiertsen -- Tilmann Altwicker -- Olgun Akbulut -- Roger Masterman -- Aaron Matta and Armen Mazmanyan -- Sarah Lambrecht. Introduction : purpose and structure, categorisation of states and hypotheses /
For some time now, the European Court of Human Rights is under substantial pressure. From a case overload crisis it stumbled into a legitimacy crisis with regard to certain countries. This should be taken seriously, since scholars warn that institutions with eroding legitimacy risk demise or reform. The goal of this volume is to explore how widespread this critical attitude of the European Court of Human Rights really is. It also assesses to what extent such criticism is being translated in strategies at the political level or at the judicial level and brings about concrete changes in the dynamics between national and European fundamental rights protection. The book is topical and innovative, as these questions have so far remained largely unexplored, especially cross-nationally.Far from focusing exclusively on those voices that are currently raised so loud, conclusions are based on comparative in-depth reports, covering fifteen Contracting Parties and the EU.With contributions of Olgun Akbulut, Tilmann Altwicker, Katarzyna Blay-Grabarczyk, Anna Gamper, Janneke Gerards, Krystyna Kowalik-Banczyk, Sarah Lambrecht, Koen Lemmens, Lubomir Majerc�ik, Giuseppe Martinico, Roger Masterman, Aaron Matta, Christophe Maubernard, Armen Mazmanyan, Katharina Pabel, Eszter Polg�ari, Patricia Popelier, Clara Rauchegger, Michael Reiertsen and Henrik Wenander.
9781780685175 1780685173 1780684010 9781780684017
European Court of Human Rights.
European Court of Human Rights.
Civil rights--Europe.
Civil rights.
Europe.
Electronic books.
KJC5138 / .C75 2016
341.4/8094
