HUMAN RIGHTS AND ITS APPROXIMATION WITH EU LEGISLATION

Author(s):  
S. Lira ◽  
L. Lindita
Keyword(s):  
Legal Skills ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 14-42
Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter first considers the process by which Acts of Parliament come into being. It then turns to delegated legislation—that is, law that is made by other bodies under Parliament’s authority. Next, it looks at EU legislation, which had an increasingly significant effect from the time that the UK joined the European Economic Community in 1973. It explains the various institutions of the EU and their role in the law-making process; the different types of EU legislation; and the circumstances in which individuals may use them in domestic courts, pre-Brexit. Finally, the chapter discusses the impact of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act 1998.


2021 ◽  
pp. 19-48
Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter first considers the process by which Acts of Parliament come into being. It then turns to delegated legislation—that is, law that is made by other bodies under Parliament’s authority. Next, it looks at EU legislation, which had an increasingly significant effect from the time that the UK joined the European Economic Community in 1973. It explains the various institutions of the EU and role they had in the law-making process; the different types of EU legislation; and the circumstances in which individuals could use them in domestic courts, prior to Brexit. Finally, the chapter discusses the impact of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act 1998.


Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter explains how to find domestic legislation, i.e., statutes, statutory instruments, and EU legislation both online and in a law library. The chapter also explains how to determine whether there is any statute law on a particular topic and how to work out whether a piece of legislation is in force. The chapter closes by explaining how to find the official current text of the European Convention on Human Rights.


Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter first considers the process by which Acts of Parliament come into being. It then turns to delegated legislation — that is, law that is made by other bodies under Parliament's authority. Next, it looks at EU legislation, which had an increasingly significant effect from the time that the UK joined the European Economic Community in 1973. It explains the various institutions of the EU and their role in the law-making process; the different types of EU legislation; and the circumstances in which individuals may use them in domestic courts, pre-Brexit. Finally, the chapter discusses the impact of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act 1998.


2021 ◽  
pp. 48-61
Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter explains how to find domestic legislation, that is, statutes, statutory instruments, and EU legislation both online and in a law library. The chapter also explains how to determine whether there is any statute law on a particular topic and how to work out whether a piece of legislation is in force. The chapter closes by explaining how to find the official current text of the European Convention on Human Rights.


Author(s):  
Angelica Dziedzic ◽  
CCline Leliivre ◽  
Jonathan Povilonis ◽  
Alberto Alemanno ◽  
Paige Morrow

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 163-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Benedi Lahuerta ◽  
Ania Zbyszewska

This article discusses the evolution of European Union (EU) legislation and policymaking methods during the 10 years since the onset of the financial and economic crisis in 2007/2008. In the EU, this period has been characterized by politics of stimulus, austerity, and recovery. Against the backdrop of longer term developments in equality law, we consider how the crisis context influenced this field’s evolution. Through the analysis of a range of legislative and policy proposals, we show that the progressive softening or hybridization of equality law over this period has gone hand in hand with the stronger articulation of equality objectives in terms of a “business case.” While this approach appears to have enabled the proliferation of policy and legal instruments and expanded the reach of equality law into areas where the EU has limited competence to legislate, it has also elevated instrumental economic goals for action at expense of human rights or social rationales. This longer term tendency is also present in the recently adopted European Pillar of Social Rights, and the accompanying policy documentation, which have been hailed as carrying potential to infuse more coherence and to rebalance the social and economic rationales that the EU integration project has unevenly promoted over the years. Mindful that it is still too early for conclusive judgments, we suggest, however, that the transformative possibilities the Pillar carries are likely to be undermined by its soft and economically oriented thrust.


Legal Skills ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 43-55
Author(s):  
Emily Finch ◽  
Stefan Fafinski

This chapter explains how to find domestic legislation, that is, statutes, statutory instruments, and EU legislation both online and in a law library. The chapter also explains how to determine whether there is any statute law on a particular topic and how to work out whether a piece of legislation is in force. The chapter closes by explaining how to find the official current text of the European Convention on Human Rights.


2020 ◽  
pp. 203228442097699
Author(s):  
Alex Tinsley

Specialty (a near-universal rule of extradition law whereby a person extradited cannot be prosecuted or punished for matters other than those for which they were extradited) is viewed traditionally as a tool to protect the sovereignty of the extraditing state, rather than as an individual right. A review of international material shows a dispute as to the existence of a rule or principle of specialty in customary international law and emphasises themes such as enforceability and standing of individuals to plead violations. Against that backdrop, the European situation is characterised by the presence of broad specialty rules which are not always implemented in legislation by requesting states, leading to refusal of extradition in some cases. Arguably, combinations of the EU law duty of conforming interpretation and European human rights law principles may offer tools to overcome such situations, approaching protection of specialty ‘rights’ whatever the original doctrinal rationale. If they do not, and international cooperation is further undermined by ineffective specialty protection, EU legislation or the development of soft law standards may be a useful way forward.


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