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Rights and Wrongs under the ECHR - The prohibition of abuse of rights in Article 17 of the European Convention on Human Rights (Paperback)
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Rights and Wrongs under the ECHR - The prohibition of abuse of rights in Article 17 of the European Convention on Human Rights (Paperback)
Series: Human Rights Research Series, 78
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The prohibition of abuse of rights in Article 17 of the European
Convention on Human Rights (ECHR or Convention) embodies one of the
Convention's main principles: its commitment to democracy and
democratic values. The provision aims to prevent groups and
individuals from successfully invoking fundamental rights and
freedoms to justify anti-democratic activities. At the same time it
is also one of the Convention's most controversial provisions.
There exists a certain tension between human rights protection and
the concept of abuse of rights. While human rights essentially aim
to promote freedom by affirming the basic rights and freedoms
citizens enjoy vis--vis state authorities, the abuse clause
primarily aims to protect the democratic organisation of the state
against groups and individuals invoking these rights with the aim
of undermining it. Furthermore, an analysis of the growing body of
case law on this topic shows that the interpretation and
application of Article 17 ECHR are far from unequivocal. While
according to Article 17 ECHR anti-democratic activities may be
excluded from the protection of the Convention, clear criteria for
determining which activities fit this description are lacking. In
addition, the case law covers different methods of application of
the abuse clause that seem to be used rather arbitrarily. This has
resulted in a rather obscure and inconsistent case-by-case
approach. This study seeks to shed light on the prohibition of
abuse of rights in Article 17 ECHR in order to contribute to a more
coherent interpretation of this provision. To that aim it studies
the abuse clause from different perspectives. First, it looks at
the historical background of the provision to examine what
motivated the drafters to include this prohibition. Then it moves
on to the case law of the European Commission of Human Rights and
the European Court of Human Rights and to legal doctrine, revealing
the difficulties and inconsistencies in the current interpretation
of the abuse clause. Next, it analyses the interpretation of
prohibitions of abuse in other human rights documents to see
whether parallels can be drawn with the interpretation of Article
17 ECHR. Subsequently, it addresses the concepts of 'abuse of
rights' and 'militant democracy' and examines the extent to which
they offer a framework for understanding the abuse clause. Based on
the insights obtained from these different perspectives, this study
puts forward a proposal as to how Article 17 ECHR can best be
applied in the future.
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