Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has evolved from an international agreement into an highly integrated legal community with an ever more pervasive effect on domestic law and individuals. The supranational authority of the European Court of Human Rights bypasses the nation state in a growing number of other areas. Understanding the evolution of the ECHR and its Court may help in explaining and contextualising growing resistance against the Court, and in developing possible responses. Examining the Convention system through the prism of supranationality, Cedric Marti offers a fresh, comprehensive and interdisciplinary perspective on the expanding adjudicatory powers of the Court, including law-making. Marti addresses the growing literature of institutional studies on human rights enforcement to ascertain the particularities of the ECHR and its relationship to domestic legal systems. This study will be of great value to both scholars of international law and human rights practitioners.
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Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has evolved from an international agreement into an highly integrated legal community with an ever more pervasive effect on domestic law and individuals. The supranational authority of the European Court of Human Rights bypasses the nation state in a growing number of other areas. Understanding the evolution of the ECHR and its Court may help in explaining and contextualising growing resistance against the Court, and in developing possible responses. Examining the Convention system through the prism of supranationality, Cedric Marti offers a fresh, comprehensive and interdisciplinary perspective on the expanding adjudicatory powers of the Court, including law-making. Marti addresses the growing literature of institutional studies on human rights enforcement to ascertain the particularities of the ECHR and its relationship to domestic legal systems. This study will be of great value to both scholars of international law and human rights practitioners.
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Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights

Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights

by Cedric Marti
Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights

Framing a Convention Community: Supranational Aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights

by Cedric Marti

Hardcover

$138.00 
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Overview

The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has evolved from an international agreement into an highly integrated legal community with an ever more pervasive effect on domestic law and individuals. The supranational authority of the European Court of Human Rights bypasses the nation state in a growing number of other areas. Understanding the evolution of the ECHR and its Court may help in explaining and contextualising growing resistance against the Court, and in developing possible responses. Examining the Convention system through the prism of supranationality, Cedric Marti offers a fresh, comprehensive and interdisciplinary perspective on the expanding adjudicatory powers of the Court, including law-making. Marti addresses the growing literature of institutional studies on human rights enforcement to ascertain the particularities of the ECHR and its relationship to domestic legal systems. This study will be of great value to both scholars of international law and human rights practitioners.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108830119
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 11/18/2021
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.22(w) x 9.33(h) x 0.83(d)

About the Author

Cedric Marti is Attorney at Law in Zurich, Switzerland. He holds a doctorate from the University of Zurich and was a visiting fellow at the Amsterdam Centre for International Law.

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. Supranationality: sources, evolution and conceptions; 2. Re-discovering supranationality; 3. From international towards supranational adjudication; 4. Sites of judicial integration and their transformation; 5. Supranational lawmaking; 6. From supranational adjudication to supranational law?; Conclusion: framing a convention community.
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