The Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights as an Instrument to counter the Rule of Law backsliding en National Legal Systems (Some Doctrinal Reflections)
Abstract
The interaction between states and European interstate organizations has taken on a new dimension: through purely domestic doctrine the Rule of Law idea becomes standardised using European informal law-making. The current paper analyses how the European Court of Human Rights can modernise and develop the content of the Rule of Law. This paper offers two main contributions to theoretical legal thought. First, it pinpoints the necessity to conceptualise the meaning and content of the Rule of Law via the instruments of judicial interpretation. Being incorporated in every article of the European Convention, the Rule of Law is interpreted by the Strasbourg Court with the aid of a “living instrument approach”. Second, this article categorises the difference between two main structural levels of the Rule of Law: its principles and their requirements. This allowed the author to build a Rule of Law anti-backsliding “reference system” that is designed in a way that is directly based on judgments rendered by the Court. It is argued that this may be useful for state legal systems as through its jurisprudence, the Court has developed a robust framework for assessing whether a member state violates the Rule of Law standards. The suggested framework has been used to hold member states accountable for their actions and to prevent any backsliding of the Rule of Law in Europe.
Downloads
Last update: 08/02/2022
The authors, by submitting their manuscripts to the Estudios Deusto. Revista de Derecho Público, accept the conditions listed below on copyright and undertake to comply with them.
- Authorship: The author must be the sole creator of the work or legally acting on behalf of and with the full agreement of all the authors.
- Copyright, liability and Ethical Guidelines:
- Authors warrant that their manuscript is original; has not been previously copyrighted or published in any form; is not under consideration for publication elsewhere; its submission and publication do not violate the Ethical Guidelines of Estudios Deusto. Revista de Derecho Público and any codes (of conduct), laws or any rights of any third party; and no publication payment by the Publisher (University of Deusto) is required.
- Authors grant to the Publisher the worldwide, sub-licensable, and royalty-free right to exploit the manuscript in all forms and media of expression, now known or developed in the future, for educational and scholarly purposes.
- Authors retain the right to present, display, distribute, develop, and republish their manuscript to progress their scientific career provided the original publication source (Estudios Deusto. Revista de Derecho Público) is properly acknowledged and in a way that does not suggest the Publisher endorses them or their use of the work.
- Authors warrant that no permissions or licences of any kind have been granted or will be granted that might infringe the rights granted to the Publisher.
- Authors are solely liable for the consequences that may arise from third parties’ complaints about the submitted manuscript and its publication in Estudios de Deusto. Revista de Derecho Público.
- Users: Estudios de Deusto. Revista de Derecho Público is an Open Access publication. Its content is free for full and immediate access, reading, search, download, distribution and reuse in any medium or format only for non-commercial purposes and in compliance with any applicable copyright legislation, without prior permission from the Publisher or the author(s). In any case, proper acknowledgement of the original publication source must be made and any changes to the original work must be indicated clearly and in a manner that does not suggest the author’s and or Publisher’s endorsement whatsoever. Any other use of its content in any medium or format, now known or developed in the future, requires prior written permission of the copyright holder.