The right to equality in European human rights law : the quest for substance in the jurisprudence of the European courts / Charilaos Nikolaidis.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780415746601 (hardback)
- 342.2408/5 23
- KJC5142 .N55 2015
- LAW000000 | LAW094000 | POL035010
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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KNCHR Library General Stacks | Non-Fiction | KJC5142 .N55 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | MKT01778 |
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KJC5132 .J33 2002 Jacobs & White, the European Convention on Human Rights. | KJC5132 .R44 2008 A practitioner's guide to the European Convention on Human Rights / | KJC5132 .Z88 1994 The admissibility of human rights petitions : | KJC5142 .N55 2015 The right to equality in European human rights law : | KJC5144.M56 M38 2006 Human rights and religion : | KJC5162 .F46 2006 Media freedom under the Human Rights Act / | KJE5132 .M69 2007 Cases and materials on the European Convention on Human Rights / |
Based upon Charilaos Nikolaidis the author's PhD thesis at King's College London--Acknowledgements.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-233) and index.
Equality and the Quest for Substance -- Substantive Equality in the European Court of Human Rights -- Substantive Equality in the European Court of Justice -- Defining Substance in European Equality Law.
"This book explores the concept of a substantive right to equality and considers the underlying rationale behind the right to equality and non-discrimination within the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and the EU. The book sets out a theoretical basis for the right to substantive equality before undertaking a careful analysis of the jurisprudence of both the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice in order to examine how the two Courts have approached the question through their case-law. The historical evolution of the prohibition of discrimination in the two legal orders is traced in order to demonstrate how the human interest safeguarded by a right to equality has developed and continues to develop within the jurisprudence of the Strasbourg and Luxembourg Courts. The book demonstrates how the right to substantive equality is becoming increasingly relevant. It shows how, despite the profound differences between the scope of ECHR and EU equality law, the two Courts have been willing to move beyond the apparent limitations of the written legal framework in several instances with a view to extending the personal and the material scope of what appears to be an emerging human right to equality"-- Provided by publisher.
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