The Legal Protection of Human Rights: Sceptical Essays
Tom Campbell, K.D. Ewing, and Adam Tomkins
Abstract
Reacting to the poor record of the UK Human Rights Act 1998 and similar provisions in protecting human rights, this book explores ways of promoting human rights more effectively through political and democratic mechanisms. The book expresses ideological scepticism concerning the relative neglect of social and economic rights and institutional scepticism concerning the failures of court-centred means for enhancing human rights goals in general. Criticizing the ‘juridification’ of human rights through the transferring of the prime responsibility for defining human rights violations to courts and ... More
Reacting to the poor record of the UK Human Rights Act 1998 and similar provisions in protecting human rights, this book explores ways of promoting human rights more effectively through political and democratic mechanisms. The book expresses ideological scepticism concerning the relative neglect of social and economic rights and institutional scepticism concerning the failures of court-centred means for enhancing human rights goals in general. Criticizing the ‘juridification’ of human rights through the transferring of the prime responsibility for defining human rights violations to courts and advocating the greater ‘politicization’ of human rights responsibilities through such measures as enhanced Parliamentary scrutiny of existing and proposed legislation, a group of twenty-four human rights scholars present a variety of perspectives on the disappointing human rights outcomes of recent institutional developments and consider the prospects of reviving the moral force and political implications of human rights values. Thus, one chapter recounts the Human Rights Act failures with respect to counter-terrorism legislation, another charts how the ‘dialogue’ model reduces parliaments' capacities to hold governments to accountable for human rights violations, a further chapter considers which institutions best protect fundament al rights, and another chapter reflects on how the idea of human rights could be ‘rescued’ in Britain today. Other chapters deal with the historical human rights failures of courts during the Cold War and in Northern Ireland, the diverse outcomes of human rights judicial review, and examine aspects of the human rights regimes in a variety of jurisdictions, including Finland, Sweden, New Zealand, Australia, Scotland, Canada, Europe, and the United States.
Keywords:
human rights,
scepticism,
human rights law,
judicial review,
democracy,
constitutional law,
UK Human Rights Act
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2011 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199606078 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2011 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199606078.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Tom Campbell, Editor
Professorial Fellow and Director of the Charles Sturt University Division of the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics
K.D. Ewing, Editor
Professor of Public Law at King's College London
Adam Tomkins, Editor
John Millar Professor of Public Law at the School of Law, University of Glasgow
Author Webpage
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