Course 5 Flashcards
What is the difference between the 2 tracks that are available?
- Treaty based mechanisms = quasi-judicial bodies with a kind of controlling/complaint mechanism: pretty close to “standing before the court”.
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Treaty and charter-based mechanisms:
- Human rights council: various monitoring mechanisms amongst which primarily:
- Universal periodic review
- Complaint procedure: you can go there and complain about gross violations, not about an individual incident but more about structural human rights problems.
- Human rights council: various monitoring mechanisms amongst which primarily:
What are the 3 relevant international organisations?
- Council of Europe: Convention on Human Rights
- European Union
- The organisation for security and cooperation in Europe that deals with some Human Rights-related issues.
What is the difference between the Council of Europe and European Union?
- Council of Europe has 47 Member States, not the European Union but very confusing. They also share similar values. We should not underestimate the Council of Europe even though it is often overshadowed by the European Union.
- ECHR is in Strasbourg and the European Parliament is in Strasbourg
What are the important treaties of the Council of Europe?
- European convention on Human Rights
- European social charter.
- One of the first conventions on data protection, treaty 108,
- Protection of national minorities.
What is the European Convention on Human rights?
- That’s a 1950 treaty, a treaty on civil and political rights. Same time as Universal Declaration on an international level: influences the international covenant on civil and political rights.
What are the judges doing?
- Growingly associated with an increase of cases, judges were always expanding:
- Marco Duranti: convention is conversative, not in the sense of cultural conservative but in the sense of market-conservative: regional European standard should work as a shield:
- Idea: national politicians will adopt progressive, leftist policies but we should limit that through the European Convention of Human Rights: that is why we are focusing on civil and political rights: right to property, state aid.
- So DNA according to Duranti was rather conservative but it completely changed and now very progressive case law. These tensions are present in the functioning of the whole system.
What are the protocols?
- Protocols that give rights:
- Protocol that adds the right to property, protocol on elections.
- These protocols will enter into force and require a minimum of ratification that can differ from protocol to protocol: there is no obligation to have a unanimous ratification. That is not necessary. There is no need to make that necessary if you add extra rights. However, applicants can’t complain over a right that was not ratified by a state they’re bringing a case against.
- Institutional protocols: in order for them to enter into force, they have to be ratified by all states = they change the machinery, reform the functioning of the court or change the preamble so you need unanimity.
Who can interpret the convention?
- The courts give very broad interpretation to the convention: it is a convention on classic civil and political rights but you can observe that the court also takes up environmental issues under article 8: defends privacy and family life: very lenient interpretation of that provision.
- Also under the right to life, under positive obligations, there are cases where people complain that they have been victims of natural hazards and explosions = state did not do enough to prevent or protect us from being victims = we do not have a reasonable system of environmental permits: state is liable because even though it is an accident, the state could have done so much more and should have done more.
- It is not always very clear to draw the line between classical, liberal, civil and political rights and environmental issues.
- Eg. case law on collective labour agreements:
- Right to assembly or freedom of association?
- Civil rights or socio-economic rights?
- Eg. case law on collective labour agreements:
What is the interpretation of the protection of property?
- Protection of property: to what extent does this include lowering of social benefits? Can we simply say social benefits and social allowances are a matter of socio-economic rights and the convention is not dealing with socio-economic rights?
- No. The Court opened this a bit, there is an extension of those rights. That is what we need to know when we talk about the standards in the European Convention on Human Rights and the Protocols adding some extra standards.
What is the European Court of Human rights and why do you need it?
- Sanctioning mechanism because you need to be able to enforce your rights, go somewhere and complain, if you don’t = illusion.
- Very basic idea underlying the convention: obligation for both domestic authorities and European Court of Human Rights States & Court working together. But first up to the national authorities to do their job:
What is the idea of subsidiarity?
- Idea of subsidiarity: This comes back in the case law but also in the institutional design when it comes to bringing cases to the Court.
- One of the reasons of the tension between states and the court.
- But also one of the ways to get out of the conflict because the states could point at the court for a number of reasons saying why it was failing to do its job properly, why it should do a better job, why It’s not efficiently respecting states’ traditions,… States could criticize the court, sometimes for good reasons and sometimes not with fair comments.
- Court then replied: maybe one of the reasons we have such a huge influx of cases is due to the fact that you fail to sufficiently protect human rights in your domestic legal orders.
- Important: we want the national states to comply and to fulfil in a way that complies under the convention. Only if they fail to comply, you can go to the Strasbourg Court.
What are the ways to bring a case before the court?
- Individual applications: the most important measure
- State applications: inter-state applications:
- Not too many because it is quite an extreme measure. Interesting part of the case law but not representative of the individual applications.
What is the individual application?
- State is always the defending party, except from the inter-state applications.
- The mere fact that a state cannot bring a case against the individual before the Strasbourg Court, does not mean that in the national order there cannot be horizontal effects against other persons.
- If something is not illegal under the domestic legal order: you could go to Strasbourg: article 8 of the European Convention.
What is the history of the organization of the court?
- You’re an applicant and you go to the court. Before ’98: you had a rather complex system, but was designed in an era before the extension of the council of Europe to the new Member States. There were fewer cases, mostly by states that were established democracies and the problem with established democracies is that not all of them are willing to except strong scrutiny.
- States often stated: “we are long time established democracies and we don’t need these laws that are just controlling us, who do they think we are?” and they have problems with binding international control. What you had is a patchwork of states, some of them recognizing individual petition, some not.
- Two-way mechanism:
- European Commission on Human Rights that would act as a kind of filtering mechanism then cases could go the Court.
- Same as the inter-American system today.
- Problem: too complex and not fit for a scenario where the Court or a lot of people bring a case to the Court.
- Solution: the 11th protocol
What is the 11th protocol?
- 11th protocol abolished the European Commission on Human Rights:
- One court that decided about the admissibility and the merits of the case. It was a non-permanent Court changed it into a permanent court.
- Also abolishing the powers of the Committees of Ministers when it comes to decisions. The Court deals with admissibility, the merits of the case. It’s a permanent Court.
- Also the idea that states could opt in for some mechanisms and not for others was abolished. The idea was that being a member of the Council of Europe means ratifying the European Convention of Human Rights. So if you ratify the European Convention on Human Rights, then you accept the jurisdiction of the Court and the individual standing of the applicant. In one big movement things become clear.