Ireland and the European Convention on Human Rights: 60 Years and Beyond
By (Author) Suzanne Egan
Edited by Dr Liam Thornton
Edited by Judy Walsh
By (author) Suzanne Egan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Professional
30th September 2014
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
342.417085
Hardback
428
Width 156mm, Height 248mm
The book 2013 marks the 60th anniversary of Irelands ratification of the European Convention on Human Rights and the 10th anniversary of the Conventions incorporation into domestic law, by means of the ECHR Act 2003. It contains a wealth of essays and articles by leading experts which examine Irelands engagement with the European Convention on Human Rights at international level down through the years as well as the extent to which the case law of the European Court of Human Rights has influenced domestic human rights law and administrative action through the vehicle of the 2003 Act. It analyses current Strasbourg jurisprudence on key issues and project its likely implications on law and policy in the Contracting States, with particular reference to Irish domestic law. The book addresses the difficult questions that arise for judges in both jurisdictions following the constitutionalisation of the European Unions Charter of Fundamental Rights in 2009 and the revised agreement of the EUs accession to the ECHR. The impact of the ECHR in Irish law is a particularly rich subject for analysis, given the strong tradition of rights review by the Irish judiciary in interpreting the fundamental rights guarantees in the Irish Constitution. While the Irish statute is superficially similar to the Human Rights Act in the United Kingdom, the context in which it operates is radically different, given the pre-eminent role of the Irish Constitution in shaping domestic human rights law. As well as outlining the specific domestic context in which the ECHR operates in Ireland, the book also includes comparative insights from the United Kingdom context as to the impact of the Human Rights Act to date in that jurisdiction. Additional themes of the book include the development of ECHR jurisprudence and its effects in the domestic setting on asylum, immigration, criminal justice, children, mental health patients, gender recognition and the limits and potential of the ECHR as regards combating poverty.
Suzanne Egan is a lecturer in international and European human rights law at the School of Law in University College Dublin. Liam Thornton is a lecturer in law and director of clinical legal education in the School of Law, UCD. Judy Walsh is Head of the Equality Studies Centre at the UCD School of Social Justice.