It has been held that the right of silence is implicit in the right to a fair trial expressed in the European Convention on Human Rights. Dr John Breslin (Barrister; Lecture in Law, University College, Dublin) reviews Irish authority to see how the privilege against self-incrimination operates within a constitutional framework. Article published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
The right to remain silent is one of the most important symbols of a fair trial in the accusatorial ...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citiz...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
As the European Court of Human Rights has come to qualify the privilege against self-incrimination a...
This article considers how fundamental rights such as the right to silence can be protected in count...
Since it came into force in September, 1953, the European Convention on Human Rights has served as a...
RIGHT TO SILENCE-UK, U.S, FRANCE, and GERMANY SALLY RAMAGE (TRADE MARK REGISTERED) WIPO ...
A person's right not to incriminate oneself or to remain silent and not contribute to their own incr...
This research focuses on whether the right to silence should have been abolished. The ‘right to sile...
This article sheds comparative and contextual light on European and international human rights debat...
ThisarticleshedscomparativeandcontextuallightonEuropeanandinternationalhuman rights debates around t...
For years, there have been threats to repeal the Human Rights Act and, with Brexit looming, it appea...
Supreme Court decisions have vacillated between two incompatible readings of the Fifth Amendment gua...
This piece is a review article of Andrew T Kenyon (ed) Comparative Defamation and Privacy Law (Cambr...
The right to remain silent is one of the most important symbols of a fair trial in the accusatorial ...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citiz...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
As the European Court of Human Rights has come to qualify the privilege against self-incrimination a...
This article considers how fundamental rights such as the right to silence can be protected in count...
Since it came into force in September, 1953, the European Convention on Human Rights has served as a...
RIGHT TO SILENCE-UK, U.S, FRANCE, and GERMANY SALLY RAMAGE (TRADE MARK REGISTERED) WIPO ...
A person's right not to incriminate oneself or to remain silent and not contribute to their own incr...
This research focuses on whether the right to silence should have been abolished. The ‘right to sile...
This article sheds comparative and contextual light on European and international human rights debat...
ThisarticleshedscomparativeandcontextuallightonEuropeanandinternationalhuman rights debates around t...
For years, there have been threats to repeal the Human Rights Act and, with Brexit looming, it appea...
Supreme Court decisions have vacillated between two incompatible readings of the Fifth Amendment gua...
This piece is a review article of Andrew T Kenyon (ed) Comparative Defamation and Privacy Law (Cambr...
The right to remain silent is one of the most important symbols of a fair trial in the accusatorial ...
The right to silence, or privilege against self-incrimination, which is protected by the common law,...
The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citiz...