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Human Rights Between Law and Politics : the Margin of Appreciation in Post-National Contexts.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Agha, Petr
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, 2016.
Colección:Modern Studies in European Law Ser.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Introduction; 1; Universalism and Relativism in the Protection of Human Rights in Europe: Politics, Law and Culture; I. Introduction; II. The Relative Universality of Human Rights; III. Human Rights, Multiculturalism and Minority Rights; IV. The Margin of Appreciation Doctrine under the ECHR; V. Culture and the Margin of Appreciation; VI. Conclusion; 2; On the Varieties of Universalism in Human Rights Discourse; I. Introduction: Europe, Human Rights and the Universal; II. Modernist Universalism and its Critics; III. The Limits of Particularism and the Returns of the Universal.
  • IV. Human Rights and Hegemonic UniversalismV. Concluding Thoughts; 3; When Human Rights Clash in 'the Age of Subsidiarity'; I. Introduction; II. Setting the Scene: Preliminary Remarks on the Margin of Appreciation and Subsidiarity; III. The Court, the Margin of Appreciation and Human Rights Clashes; IV. The Court and the ""Clashing Rights"" Principle; V.A Reinterpreted Role for the Margin of Appreciation in Human Rights Clashes; VI. Conclusion; 4; The Margin of Appreciation as an Underenforcement Doctrine; I. Introduction; II. Underenforcement, Institutional Considerations and the MoA.
  • III. Explaining the Underenforcement of Convention Rights: Resource-Bounded Enforcement of the ECHRIV. Justifying the Underenforcement of Convention Rights: Normative Institutional Considerations; 5; Anything to Appreciate?; I. Introductory Remarks; II. Jurisprudential Triviality of the Margin of Appreciation Doctrine: General Remarks; III. The Council of Europe between the Universality of Rights and the Particularity of Cultures; IV. The Semantics of Rights in Politics, Law and Public Morality: From Normative Philosophies to the Social Systems Theory of Rights.
  • v. Human Rights, Their Evolution and Paradoxes: A Sociological PerspectiveVI. Human Rights as Power Constellations; VII. The Force and Limits of Legal Doctrine; VIII. Anything But Discretionary Power?; IX. From Different Reasons to the Reasonable Differences in the Margin of Appreciation of Doctrine; X. Concluding Remarks: Human Rights, Functional Differentiation and the Impossibility of Justice; 6; The Prisoner""s Dilemma; I. Introduction; II. Two Versions of the Margin of Appreciation; III. The European Saga of Prisoners' Voting Rights.
  • IV. Framing the Issue: Legal or Political Constitutionalism?V. The MoA and Proportionality Review: Trivialising the Right to Vote; VI. Reasoning on the Right to Vote; 7; Social Sensitivity, Consensus and the Margin of Appreciation; I. Approaches to the Margin of Appreciation; II. Sexuality and Same-Sex Partnerships; III. Morally Contentious Expression; IV. Conclusion; 8; Religious Rights and the Margin of Appreciation; I. Introduction; II. The Place of Religion in the ECHR; III. Religion and Human Rights; IV. The Jurisprudence of the ECtHR on Religious Rights; V. The MoA in Religious Cases.