L A W - H A R T – Human Rights
Exporting the European Convention on Human Rights
Minority Recognition and the Diversity Deficit
Maria-Louiza Deftou, University of Athens, Greece
The ECHR's impact is considerable, nationally and supranationally. To what degree has that influence seen its norms, doctrines and methods of interpretation being exported into other human rights systems? This book answers that question by exploring the judicial dialogue of the ECHR system with comparable legal orders. It takes a horizontal study of regional and global systems to identify the impact of the ECHR within the confines of their jurisprudence. It analyses the legal consequences of the extension of these norms and what it means for the functioning of international human rights law. A compelling study for European and international human rights scholars. UK October 2022 • US October 2022 • 368 pages HB 9781509952434 • £85.00 / $115.00 ePub 9781509952441 • £76.50 / $105.78 ePdf 9781509952458 • £76.50 / $105.78 Series: Modern Studies in European Law • Hart Publishing
Comparative Perspectives
Edited by Jessika Eichler, Max Planck Institute, Germany & Kyriaki Topidi, European Centre for Minority Issues, Germany This book addresses how forms of minority recognition can be articulated in the law, institutions, and contemporary societal contexts. It explores minority rights through critical engagement with the law and its categorisations. Furthermore, it looks at collective recognition through distinct rights, including participation and free speech as well as the challenges within related conflicts of rights. It addresses intersectional forms of discrimination, revealing the complexities of societal exclusion. Looking at empirical findings in Europe and Latin America, the book draws theoretical conclusions and new frameworks of recognition. UK October 2022 • US October 2022 • 256 pages HB 9781509953073 • £85.00 / $115.00 ePub 9781509953080 • £76.50 / $105.78 ePdf 9781509953097 • £76.50 / $105.78 Hart Publishing
Hart Monographs in Transnational and International Law Craig Martin Scott, York University, Canada
Faith in Courts
Human Rights Advocacy and the Transnational Regulation of Religion
Human Rights and Violence
The Hope and Fear of the Liberal World Jarna Petman, University of Helsinki, Finland
The phenomenon of judicialisation in the field of freedom of religion is long recognised. But, to date, little has been written on how advocacy and strategic litigation has actively changed the field. This important books does just that. It shows how Jehovah’s Witnesses, Muslims, Sikhs, Evangelicals, Christian conservatives and Russian Orthodox actors have negotiated the right to freedom of religion at the ECtHR over the past 30 years and draws on in-depth interviews, case law analysis, and media representation.
This book offers a critical, albeit sympathetic, exploration of the conditions for practising and enforcing human rights in a world steeped in ambivalence. Through an historical narrative it first unravels the liberal tension that inheres in rights, and then moves on to examine the case law of the European Court of Human Rights to illustrate how the tension compels a choice in the exercise of rights. In the final part, the tension and the choice in rights is analysed within the realm of humanitarian violence. A thoughtful, provoking exploration of how lawyers can both criticise and support human rights.
UK November 2022 • US November 2022 • 288 pages HB 9781509945047 • £80.00 / $110.00 ePub 9781509945108 • £72.00 / $100.29 ePdf 9781509945115 • £72.00 / $100.29 Series: Hart Monographs in Transnational and International Law • Hart Publishing
UK November 2022 • US November 2022 • 352 pages HB 9781849465335 • £60.00 / $80.00 ePub 9781782254256 • £54.00 / $75.56 ePdf 9781782254249 • £54.00 / $75.56 Series: Hart Monographs in Transnational and International Law • Hart Publishing
Lisa Harms, University of Münster, Germany
Human Rights Law in Perspective Colin Harvey, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Religious Accommodation and its Limits A Proposed Model
Farrah Raza, Pembroke College, UK This book offers an original model of religious accommodation which can be applied in practice in secular liberal democracies where religious diversity continues to pose various challenges. Firstly, the book makes a case for religious accommodation by addressing the key normative challenges raised by religious claims. Secondly, it offers a typology of how religious claims can be managed and limited through the careful balancing of competing interests. UK December 2022 • US December 2022 • 176 pages HB 9781509937103 • £65.00 / $90.00 ePub 9781509937110 • £58.50 / $81.05 ePdf 9781509937127 • £58.50 / $81.05 Series: Human Rights Law in Perspective • Hart Publishing
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The Times and Temporalities of International Human Rights Law
Edited by Kathryn McNeilly, Queen’s University, UK & Ben Warwick, Birmingham Law School, UK This collection brings together a range of international contributors to stimulate discussions on time and international human rights law. The book explores how time and its diverse forms can be understood to operate on, and in, this area of law; how time manifests in the theory and practice of human rights law internationally; and how specific areas of human rights can be understood via temporal analyses. UK February 2022 • US February 2022 • 256 pages HB 9781509949908 • £85.00 / $115.00 ePub 9781509949915 • £76.50 / $105.78 ePdf 9781509949922 • £76.50 / $105.78 Series: Human Rights Law in Perspective • Hart Publishing
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