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A Theory of Interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights (Paperback)
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A Theory of Interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights (Paperback)
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This book looks at both how the European Convention on Human Rights
has been interpreted and how it ought to be interpreted. Unlike a
purely doctrinal approach, it aims at proposing an evaluative
theory of interpretation for the European Convention on Human
Rights. And unlike a purely normative account, it seeks to locate
interpretive values within the history of the ECHR by surveying and
analysing all the relevant judgements of the European Court of
Human Rights. Consequently, the book discusses cases as much as it
discusses philosophical theories, seeking to strike the appropriate
balance between the two. Recent developments have raised mportant
jurisprudential issues in relation to the interpretation of the
ECHR which point to the relationship between the two foundational
principles of a supranational human rights system: state
sovereignty on one hand and the universality of human rights on the
other. This book analyses the idea that creative interpretation and
choice in interpretation amounts, by default, to illegitimate
discretion and is used to wave the flag of judicial self-restraint.
It balances this against the inconsistency or lack of clarity in
the methods used by the Court, most notably the margin of
appreciation doctrine, and looks at the criticism often levelled at
the Court that its use of the doctrine masks the real basis for its
decisions. The cases that have been coming before the European
Court of Human Rights in recent years pose serious interpretive
challenges. Does the right to life under art. 2 ECHR include the
right to terminate one's life? Does the right to private life under
article 8 ECHR include the right to sleep at night free from
airplane noise? Does the right to property under art. 1 Protocol 1
ECHR entitle the former King of Greece to claim compensation for
the expropriation of royal property, following a referendum? Do
homosexual couples have a right to adopt under art. 8 ECHR? This
book argues that how law should be interpreted, and what legal
rights individuals have, are important questions of political
morality that are both capable, and in need of, principled
justification. Finally, the book argues that evolutive
interpretation does not refer to how most European member states
now understand their obligations under the Convention but to how
they should understand them given the egalitarian values that they
share, and defents the idea of an emerging consensus combined with
a theory of autonomous concepts as a way to provide the appropriate
authority for the Court to adopt an egalitarian theory of human
rights.
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