European University Institute Library

Effective domestic remedies and the European Court of Human Rights, applications of the European Convention on Human Rights Article 13, Michael Reiertsen

Label
Effective domestic remedies and the European Court of Human Rights, applications of the European Convention on Human Rights Article 13, Michael Reiertsen
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Effective domestic remedies and the European Court of Human Rights
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1341407843
Responsibility statement
Michael Reiertsen
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
applications of the European Convention on Human Rights Article 13
Summary
In Malone v. UK (Plenary 1984), the right to an effective domestic remedy in the European Convention on Human Rights Article 13 was famously described as one of the most obscure clauses in the Convention. Since then, the European Court of Human Rights has reinforced the scope and application of the right. Through an analysis of virtually all of the Court's judgments concerning Article 13, the book exhaustively accounts for the development and current scope and content of the right. The book also provides normative recommendations on how the Court could further develop the right, most notably how it could be a tool to regulate the relationship between domestic and international protection of human rights. In doing so, the book situates itself within larger debates on the enforcement of the entire Convention such as the principle of subsidiarity and the procedural turn in the Court's case law.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Setting the scene -- Analysis and selection of case law -- The requirement of effectiveness in abstract -- Historical and statistical overview -- Relationship with the rule on exhaustion of domestic remedies -- Scope of application -- The arguability test -- A relative standard -- General requirements and principles -- Access to justice -- Redress -- A normative and contextual reading -- Conclusions and recommendations
Content
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