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Hart Studies in Security and Justice

Coercive Human Rights

Positive Duties to Mobilise the Criminal Law under the ECHR

Natasa Mavronicola & Laurens Lavrysen

Coercive Human Rights

Hart Studies in Security and Justice

Coercive Human Rights

Positive Duties to Mobilise the Criminal Law under the ECHR

Hart Studies in Security and Justice: Coercive Human Rights

 

Traditionally, human rights have protected those facing the sharp edge of the criminal justice system. But over time human rights law has become increasingly infused with duties to mobilise criminal law towards protection and redress for violation of rights.


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Beschrijving Hart Studies in Security and Justice: Coercive Human Rights

Traditionally, human rights have protected those facing the sharp edge of the criminal justice system. But over time human rights law has become increasingly infused with duties to mobilise criminal law towards protection and redress for violation of rights. These developments give rise to a whole host of questions concerning the precise parameters of coercive human rights, the rationale(s) that underpin them, and their effects and implications for victims, perpetrators, domestic legal systems, and for the theory and practice of human rights and criminal justice. This collection addresses these questions with a focus on the rich jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR).

The collection explores four interlocking themes surrounding the issue of coercive human rights:

First, the key threads in the doctrine of the ECtHR on duties to mobilise the criminal law as a means of delivering human rights protection.

Secondly, the factors that contribute to a readiness to demand coercive measures, including discrimination and vulnerability, and other key justificatory reasoning shaping the development of coercive human rights.

Thirdly, the most pressing challenges for the ECtHR's coercive duties doctrine, including:

- how it relates to theories and rationales of criminalisation and criminal punishment;

- its implications for the fundamental tenets of human rights law itself;

- its relationship to transitional justice objectives; and

- how (far) it coheres with the imperative of effective protection for persons in precarious or vulnerable situations.

Fourthly, the (prospective) evolution of the coercive human rights doctrine and its application within national jurisdictions.




Table Of Contents

1. Coercive Human Rights: Introducing the Sharp Edge of the European Convention on Human Rights

Natasa Mavronicola and Laurens Lavrysen



PART I

KEY THREADS IN ECtHR DOCTRINE

2. Positive Obligations and the Criminal Law: A Bird's-Eye View on the Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights

Laurens Lavrysen

3. Positive Obligations and Coercion: Deterrence as a Key Factor in the European Court of Human Rights' Case Law

Paul Lemmens and Marie Courtoy



PART II

PERSPECTIVES ON VICTIMS' PROTECTION AND REDRESS

4. Retribution through Reparations? Evaluating the European Court of Human Rights' Jurisprudence on Gross Human Rights Violations from a Victim's Perspective

Alina Balta

5. Shaping Coercive Obligations through Vulnerability: The Example of the ECtHR

Corina Heri

6. Criminal Law Responses to Hate Speech: Towards a Systematic Approach in Strasbourg?

Stephanos Stavros



PART III

CRITICAL REFLECTIONS: THEORY, IMPACT, LIMITATIONS

7. Positive Obligations in View of the Principle of Criminal Law as a Last Resort

Nina Peršak

8. Sowing a 'Culture of Conviction': What Shall Domestic Criminal Justice Systems Reap from Coercive Human Rights?

Mattia Pinto

9. Coercive Overreach, Dilution and Diversion: Potential Dangers of Aligning Human Rights Protection with Criminal Law (Enforcement)

Natasa Mavronicola

10. Separating Protection from the Exigencies of the Criminal Law: Achievements and Challenges under Article 4 ECHR

Vladislava Stoyanova

11. The Limitations of a Criminal Law Approach in a Transitional Justice Context

Brice Dickson



PART IV

UNCHARTED WATERS FOR THE ECtHR'S COERCIVE DUTIES DOCTRINE

12. Preventive Obligations, Risk and Coercive Overreach

Liora Lazarus

13. Coercive Human Rights and Unlawfully Obtained Evidence in Domestic Criminal Proceedings

Kelly M Pitcher

Postscript: Coercive Human Rights in Times of Coronavirus

Natasa Mavronicola and Laurens Lavrysen


ISBN
9781509937875
Pagina's
328
Verschenen
Serie
Hart Studies in Security and Justice
NUR
823
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Hardback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
Hart Publishing