The Future of Human Rights Law

  • T.A.O. Endicott
Keywords: human rights, The European Convention on Human Rights, proportionality, human rights adjudication, United Kingdom Human Rights Act 1998

Abstract

Justiciable charters of rights give courts a dynamic and controversial role in governance, which is in tension with the roles of the executive and the legislature. In this essay I comment, from the British point of view, on the way in which these tensions work out in the law of the European Convention on Human Rights. I argue that politicians need to accept that the tension between the role of the courts and the roles of the executive and the legislature will be permanent, and is not a reason for withdrawing from the Convention, or for ignoring the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.
Published
2012-02-08
How to Cite
EndicottT. (2012). The Future of Human Rights Law. Law Journal of the Higher School of Economics, (5), 4-11. Retrieved from https://law-journal.hse.ru/article/view/21348
Section
Untitled section