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A Theory of Interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights (Hardcover)
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A Theory of Interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights (Hardcover)
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Does the right to life under article 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 article 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 article 8 ECHR? This
book looks at both how the European Convention on Human Rights has,
and 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,
striking an appropriate balance between the two. Examining how law
should be interpreted and what legal rights individuals have, this
book raises important questions of political morality that are both
capable - and in need of - principled justification. George Letsas
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. He defends 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. A Theory of Interpretation
of the European Convention on Human Rights provides a
philosophically informed study of the methods of interpretation
used by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. By
drawing on Anglo-Americal legal, political and moral philosophy,
the book also aims to provide a normative theory of the foundations
of the ECHR rights.
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