Contrasting prisoners' rights: a comparative examination of Germany and England
In: [Oxford monographs on criminal law and justice]
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In: [Oxford monographs on criminal law and justice]
In: Federal Law Review, Forthcoming
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In: Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law, Oxford University Press, Forthcoming
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In: International legal materials: ILM, Band 55, Heft 2, S. 361-406
ISSN: 1930-6571
On April 29, 2015, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) adopted the United Nations Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right of Anyone Deprived of Their Liberty to Bring Proceedings Before a Court (BPGs). This comprehensive and practical document is based on an extensive range of international law sources, standards, and good practice. It provides states with specific and specialized guidance on how to fulfill their international obligations to protect against the arbitrary deprivation of liberty.
In: International Legal Materials, Band 55, Heft 2
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In: Rowan Cruft, Matthew Liao and Massimo Renzo (Eds), the Philosophical Foundations of Human RightsOxford University Press, 2014, Forthcoming
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In: R Dickinson et al, Examining Critical Perspectives on Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012)
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In: Benjamin J. Goold and Liora Lazarus, Security and Human Rights (Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2007)
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In: Modern Law Review Volume 69, Issue 5, September 2006, Pages 738–769
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The UK criminal justice system has been subject to the protections of the European Convention on Human Rights since the right to individual petition to the European Court of Human Rights was granted to UK citizens in 1966. The Convention rights became the subject of domestic UK litigation with the Human Rights Act 1998. This essay demonstrates how, both before and after the Human Rights Act, UK courts and legislators have sought to reconcile common law approaches to protecting rights and liberties with the approaches of the Strasbourg Court. It uses the development of the case law as an insight into a dynamic institutional dialogue: how interaction with the European Court of Human Rights has shaped the way that UK courts, governments and Parliament have acted on criminal justice issues and vice versa.
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The UK criminal justice system has been subject to the protections of the European Convention on Human Rights since the right to individual petition to the European Court of Human Rights was granted to UK citizens in 1966. The Convention rights became the subject of domestic UK litigation with the Human Rights Act 1998. This essay demonstrates how, both before and after the Human Rights Act, UK courts and legislators have sought to reconcile common law approaches to protecting rights and liberties with the approaches of the Strasbourg Court. It uses the development of the case law as an insight into a dynamic institutional dialogue: how interaction with the European Court of Human Rights has shaped the way that UK courts, governments and Parliament have acted on criminal justice issues and vice versa.
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In: Murray Hunt (Ed), Parliament and Human Rights: Redressing the Democratic Deficit (Oxford University Press 2014), Forthcoming
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In: Hart studies in security and justice volume 6
Security and human rights : finding a language of resilience and inclusion / Liora Lazarus and Benjamin J Goold -- Torture and othering / Natasa Mavronicola -- Their bodies, ourselves : muslim women's clothing at the intersection of rights, security, and extremism / Rumee Ahmed and Ayesha S Chaudhry -- The uses of religious identity, practice, and dogma in "soft" and "hard" counterterrorism / Aziz Z Huq -- Curtailing citizenship rights as counterterrorism / Lucia Zedner -- Trusted travelers and trojan horses : security, privacy, and privilege at the border / Benjamin J Goold -- Secrecy as a meta-paradigmatic challenge / Liora Lazarus -- Accountability mechanisms for transnational counterterrorism / Kent Roach -- Security and human rights after the nationalist backlash / Victor Ramraj -- The demise of rights as trumps / Robert Diab -- Violence, human rights, and security / Chetan Bhatt -- Privacy versus security : the challenge of striking a balance / Arianna Vedaschi -- Anonymity for victims in terrorism cases at the special tribunal for lebanon : security and human rights at work in international criminal justice / Juan-Pablo Pérez-León Acevedo -- The legal death of rebellion : counterterrorism laws and the shrinking legal freedom of violent political resistance / Ben Saul -- Indirectly inciting terrorism : crimes of expression and the limits of the law / Helen Duffy and Kate Pitcher -- Oversight of the state of emergency in france / Marc-Antoine Granger -- Bounded factuality : the targeted killing of Salah Shehadeh and the legal epistemology of risk / Shiri Krebs -- The counterterrorism complex / Andreas Armborst -- Security and human rights in the context of forced migration / David Irvine and Travers McLeod.