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While the European integration project is facing new challenges,
abandonments and criticism, it is often forgotten that there are
powerful legal instruments that allow citizens to protect and
extend their rights. These instruments and the actions taken to
activate them are often overlooked and deliberately ignored in the
mainstream debates. This book presents a selection of cases in
which legal institutions, social movements, avant-gardes and
minorities have tried, and often succeeded, to enhance the current
state of human rights through traditional as well as innovative
actions. The chapters of this book investigate some of the cases in
which the gap between the conventionally recognized rights and
those advocated is becoming wider and where traditionally
disadvantaged groups raise new problems or new issues are emerging
concerning individual freedom, transparency and accountability,
which are not yet properly addressed in the current political and
legal landscape. Can political institutions and courts without
coercive power of last resort actually foster more progressive
rights? This book suggests that the expansion of human rights might
be a viable strategy to generate a proper European citizenship.
This text will be of key interest to scholars and students of
European Studies, Politics and International Relations, Law and
Society, Sociology and Migration Studies and more broadly to NGOs
and policy advisers.
While the European integration project is facing new challenges,
abandonments and criticism, it is often forgotten that there are
powerful legal instruments that allow citizens to protect and
extend their rights. These instruments and the actions taken to
activate them are often overlooked and deliberately ignored in the
mainstream debates. This book presents a selection of cases in
which legal institutions, social movements, avant-gardes and
minorities have tried, and often succeeded, to enhance the current
state of human rights through traditional as well as innovative
actions. The chapters of this book investigate some of the cases in
which the gap between the conventionally recognized rights and
those advocated is becoming wider and where traditionally
disadvantaged groups raise new problems or new issues are emerging
concerning individual freedom, transparency and accountability,
which are not yet properly addressed in the current political and
legal landscape. Can political institutions and courts without
coercive power of last resort actually foster more progressive
rights? This book suggests that the expansion of human rights might
be a viable strategy to generate a proper European citizenship.
This text will be of key interest to scholars and students of
European Studies, Politics and International Relations, Law and
Society, Sociology and Migration Studies and more broadly to NGOs
and policy advisers.
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