Month: June 2008

  • More Judgments on Detention Conditions

    More Judgments on Detention Conditions

    Yesterday, the Court found a violation of Article 3 in the case of Kotsaftis v. Greece. Kotsaftis suffered of hepatitis B and complained that he had incurred the disease during detention. His medical condition was so bad that he needed to be treated in hospital

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  • Human Rights During Armed Conflict

    Human Rights During Armed Conflict

    The manner of applying human rights to situations of armed conflict has been a topic of heated debate in academia and in courts in the last decade. A recent article in Global Jurist addresses the issue. Federico Sperotto’s Law in Times of War: The Case

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  • Hurrah!

    Hurrah!

    Today this blog reached 1000 page views! I am very happy that news on the Court’s judgments, on recent academic articles and other ECHR-related topics have found such a large audience (from 44 different countries so far) in less than three weeks. All the more

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  • On Wheels Behind Bars

    On Wheels Behind Bars

    Yesterday, the Court held, in the case of Scoppola v. Italy, that Italy had violated Article 3 ECHR. The applicant, a man in a wheelchair who had no physical personal autonomy, was sentenced to life imprisonment after killing his wife and wounding one of his

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  • Hearings to be Watched

    Hearings to be Watched

    This month the Court will hold a number of notable hearings. Among them is the case of the Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church v. Poland, concerning uncertainty of ownership of a number of church buildings and the implications for the freedom of religion (hearing 17 June).

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  • Two ECHR Articles on SSRN

    Two ECHR Articles on SSRN

    I would like to highlight two recent articles on the European Convention of Human Rights, both by professor Laurence Helfer of Vanderbilt University, who kindly drew my attention to them. The first, from the European Journal of International Law, focuses on the notion of ’embeddedness’

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  • Bumpy Road to Strasbourg

    Bumpy Road to Strasbourg

    The road to the Court in Strasbourg can be long and bumpy. And some applications are doomed to fail from the start. One needs only to think of the application filed by a computer animation company a few years ago, one of whose complaints was

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  • Violation of Roma Right to Education

    Violation of Roma Right to Education

    Today the Court held, unanimously, in the case of Sampanis and others v. Greece, that the treatment of a group of Roma school children by the Greek authorities violated Article 14 ECHR (prohibition of discrimination) taken together with Article 2 of Protocol No. 1. The

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  • Implementing the Court’s Judgments

    Implementing the Court’s Judgments

    The Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has just declassified a report entitled Implementation of Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. The report, which is part of the Parliamentary Assembly’s ongoing monitoring of

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  • Jurisdiction Revisited Once More

    Jurisdiction Revisited Once More

    The issue of jurisdiction in the context of human rights has been a focal point of much academic research in the past decade. Marko Milanovic of the Belgrade Centre for Human Rights has just posted a pre-print of an upcoming article in the Human Rights

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