The Concept of the Rule of Law and the European Court of Human Rights


Book Description

This book analyses the concept of the rule of law in the context of international law, through the case law of the European Court of Human Rights. It investigates how the court has defined and interpreted the notion of the rule of law in its jurisprudence. It places this analysis against a background of more theoretical accounts of the idea of the rule of law, drawing in ideas of political philosophy. It also provides a comparative assessment, demonstrating how the idea of the rule of law has evolved in the UK, France, and Germany. The book argues that at the core of the concept of the rule of law are the notions of legality and judicial safeguards. It states that the Court has developed the requirements of legality, which the work analyses in detail, based on that concept. It assesses the independence of the judiciary as an aspect of the rule of law in the context of the European Convention on Human Rights, and the relationship between the rule of law and the substantive contents of law. The book posits that the rule of law as seen at the Court is not mainly utilised with regard to 'freedom' rights, but is more concerned with procedural rights. It discusses the relationship between the rule of law and the view of the Convention as a constitutional instrument of the European public order, and shows that the rule of law and democracy are inextricably linked in the case law of the Court. Ultimately, the book demonstrates in its analysis of the Court's jurisprudence that the notion of the rule of law is a crucial part of the international legal order.







Law, Justice and the State: The nation, the state and democracy


Book Description

"Proceedings of the 16th World Congress of the International Association for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy (IVR), Reykjavík, 26 May-2 June, 1993."--T.p.




Law, Justice and the State: Nordic perspectives


Book Description

"Proceedings of the 16th World Congress of the International Association for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy (IVR), Reykjavík, 26 May-2 June, 1993."--T.p.




Der Universalitätsanspruch des demokratischen Rechtsstaates


Book Description

Referate der Tagung der Deutschen Sektion der IVR vom 28. bis zum 30. September 1994 in Mannheim Aus dem Inhalt: H. Hofmann: Geschichtlichkeit und Universalitatsanspruch des Rechtsstaats - H. Folkers: Allgemeinheit des Rechts trotz Verschiedenheit des Glaubens? - Die Glaubensfreiheit als Legitimationsproblem - R. Wahl: Die Person im Standestaat und im Rechtsstaat - Vergleichende Betrachtungen zur europaischen und japanischen Entwicklung - W. Schreckenberger: Der Nationalstaat und die Rechtsstaatsidee - B. Schunemann: Aufarbeitung von Unrecht aus totalitarer Zeit - M. Herdegen: Der Universalitatsanspruch des Rechtsstaates: Menschenrechtsmission? - U. Diederichsen: Innere Grenzen des Rechtsstaats - E. Riedel: Recht, Zwang, Effektivitat - Muss Recht justizformig sein? - L. Schulz: Der nulla-poena-Grundsatz - ein Fundament des Rechtsstaats? - G. Teubner: Altera Pars Audiatur: Das Recht in der Kollision anderer Universalitatsanspruche - D. von der Pfordten: Die okologisch-ethische Herausforderung des Rechtsstaats







Applied Ethics at the Turn of the Millenium


Book Description

Burton M. Leiser: Preface Elspeth Attwooll / Annette Brockmoller: Preface Rafael Encinas de Munagorri: Les Problemes de preuve poses par l'evolution des sciences et des technologies Richard A. L. Gambitta / Gary S. Kitchen: Genetic Engineering and the Law Mariachiara Tallacchini: The Patentability of Human Biological Materials Joan C. Callahan: Liberalism, Reproductive Technologies, and Feminist Skepticism Gerry Maher: Future Trends in Computer-Generated Pornography: Ethical Principle and Legal Regulation of "Bespoke" Pornography Fernando Galindo: La puesta en practica de la regulacion de Internet por la Filosofia del Derecho comunicativa Richard T. De George: Business Ethics and The International Legal Coordination Problem Takao Katsuragi: On Multi-Value Structure or Market Ethics Francois Ost / Mark van Hoecke: From contract to transmission Robert Isaak: Philosophical Bases of "Green Logic"




Sources of Law and Legislation


Book Description

Challenges to law at the end of the 20th Century.- v.3.




Universal Minority Rights?


Book Description

"Proceedings of the fifth Kobe lectures, Tokyo and Kyoto, December 1998."--T.p.




Epistemology and Ontology


Book Description

Contents A. van Aaken: Synthesizing the Best of Two Worlds: A Combination of New Institutional Economics and Deliberative Theories D. Coskun: Law as symbolic form. Ernst Cassirer and the anthropocentric view of law L. De Sutter: How to Get Rid of Legal Theory? L. Garc�a Ruiz: On the Concept of Law and Its Place in the Legal-Philosophical Research N. Intzessiloglou: Socio-semiotic and socio-cybernetic approaches to legal regulation in an interdisciplinary framework L. Kaehler: The indeterminacy of legal indeterminacy M. Mahlmann: Kant's Conception of Practical Reason and the Prospects of Mentalism M. Mahlmann / J. Mikhail: Cognitive Science, Ethics and Law t G. Noll: The Exclusionary Construction of Human Rights in International Law and Political Theory C. Peterson: The Concept of Legal Dogmatics: From Fiction to Fact F. Puppo: Law, authority and freedom in Sophocles' Antigone M. Sandstr�m: The Concept of Legal Dogmatics Revisited B. Schafer: Ontological commitment and the concept of �legal system� in comparative law and legal theory S. Schaumburg-Mueller: Truth, Law, and Human Rights P. Sommaggio: Boethius' definition of persona: a fundamental principle of modern legal thought X. Yu: Human Faculties and Human Societies - A Three Dimensional Cultural Epistemology W. Zaluski: The Concept of Kantian Rationality and Game Theory.