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Sceptical Essays on Human Rights


Sceptical Essays on Human Rights

Hardback by Campbell, Tom (Professor of Law, Professor of Law, Australian National University); Ewing, Keith (Professor of Public Law, Professor of Public Law, King's College London); Tomkins, Adam (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Oxford)

Sceptical Essays on Human Rights

£145.00

ISBN:
9780199246694
Publication Date:
20 Dec 2001
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
460 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 15 May 2024
Sceptical Essays on Human Rights

Description

Britain's Human Rights Act 1998 is the latest in a wave of legislative and constitutional instruments that have been passed in a number of countries (including Canada, New Zealand and South Africa) and which put human rights at the top of the public law agenda. For the most part these instruments are widely welcomed by senior judges and by academic and practising lawyers, many of whom will have campaigned for their introduction. There are, however, very considerable doubts about the wisdom of these developments within the democratic tradition of government which remain unanswered. This collection of 20 essays written by an array of internationally prestigious scholars explores these reservations. All the contributors endorse the importance of human rights within any democratic system of government, but question whether the primary responsibility for the articulation of these rights ought to be taken away from the normal political processes of representative government; they also consider the constitutional implications of doing so. Specifically, the extensive shift of political authority to the judiciary which is involved in Britain's Human Rights Act is critically examined and other ways of specifying and promoting human rights in more democratic forums are considered. Particular attention is paid to the priority which should be given to economic and social rights within the new constitutional settlement. Overseas contributions, ranging from Eastern Europe to South Africa, via North America and Australasia, illustrate the pitfalls of importing other constitutional models. Written throughout in an engaging and accessible style, this book is essential reading for all those with an interest in law or politics.

Contents

1. Introduction ; 1: SCEPTICISM AND HUMAN RIGHTS ; 2. Political Citizenship versus Fundamental Rights ; 3. Rights, Democracy, and the Nature of the Legal Order ; 4. The Unbalanced Constitution ; 5. Human Rights in a Postnational Order: Reconciling Political and Constitutional Pluralism ; 6. Rights, Sovereignty, and 'the People' ; 7. Incorporation through Interpretation ; 2: THE IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS ACT ; 8. Rights Versus Devolution ; 9. Human Rights in Northern Ireland ; 10. Taking Wales Seriously ; 11. Scepticism under Scrutiny: Labour Law and Human Rights ; 12. Discrimination Law and the Human Rights Act ; 13. Tort Law and the Human Rights Act ; 14. Criminal Justice, Legal Rights, Judicial Interpretation: On Being Sceptical about the Human Rights Act ; 15. Minority Protection and Human Rights ; 3: THE EXPERIENCE OF ELSEWHERE: REASONS TO BE SCEPTICAL ; 16. The Canadian Charter of Rights: Recognition, Redistribution, and the Imperialism of the Courts ; 17. The South African Experience ; 18. Postcommunist Central Europe ; 19. Scepticism about Judicial Review: A Perspective from the United States ; 20. The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act: Lessons for the UK? ; 21. The Australian Free Speech Experiment and Scepticism about the Human Rights Act ; Index

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