This article provides an anti-Orientalist critique of jurisprudence within the European Court of Human Rights. Discussion is located in the context of the longstanding debate over what it is to be “European” and an awareness of how these wider discourses shape rights adjudication at national and intra-national levels in Europe. Argument draws on literature from post-colonial theorists, cultural studies, and feminist legal theory which identify and discuss “Orientalist” discourses to analyse the production of legal knowledge and jurisprudence from the European Court of Human Rights. The article argues that Orientalist discourses affect the ways that the Court constructs and positions both the claimant and the respondent state in human rights...
In Western Thrace in Greece, a legacy of the Ottoman Empire survives in the form of religious law (S...
This article examines the stereotyping of Islam both by advocates and academics in refugee rights ad...
Idea of human rights came from ancienit Greece. Rethought in renaissance period, accompain humankind...
Womens' access to and enjoyment of human rights are increasingly being used as a global measure of o...
Alaa Hajyahia is a J.S.D Candidate at Yale Law School and a Ph.D. candidate in the anthropology depa...
The European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) has repeatedly found no violation of articles 9 and...
This thesis uses the Critical theory to explore the history and functioning of African Court on Huma...
More and more people are turning to human rights courts to seek protection against prejudice, disadv...
This chapter focuses on intersectionality theory and methodology and draws on practical examples fro...
This article studies the Islam-related cases of the European Court of Human Rights through the lens ...
This article critically examines the ways in which the European Court of Human Rights represents app...
The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR or, the Court) is a formidable player in the development o...
Religious freedom within Europe and the place of Islam within Europe are of particular contemporary ...
In 2014 the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) upheld the French Constitutional Court’s decision...
This thesis is about establishing a balance between universal human rights and particular cultures o...
In Western Thrace in Greece, a legacy of the Ottoman Empire survives in the form of religious law (S...
This article examines the stereotyping of Islam both by advocates and academics in refugee rights ad...
Idea of human rights came from ancienit Greece. Rethought in renaissance period, accompain humankind...
Womens' access to and enjoyment of human rights are increasingly being used as a global measure of o...
Alaa Hajyahia is a J.S.D Candidate at Yale Law School and a Ph.D. candidate in the anthropology depa...
The European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) has repeatedly found no violation of articles 9 and...
This thesis uses the Critical theory to explore the history and functioning of African Court on Huma...
More and more people are turning to human rights courts to seek protection against prejudice, disadv...
This chapter focuses on intersectionality theory and methodology and draws on practical examples fro...
This article studies the Islam-related cases of the European Court of Human Rights through the lens ...
This article critically examines the ways in which the European Court of Human Rights represents app...
The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR or, the Court) is a formidable player in the development o...
Religious freedom within Europe and the place of Islam within Europe are of particular contemporary ...
In 2014 the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) upheld the French Constitutional Court’s decision...
This thesis is about establishing a balance between universal human rights and particular cultures o...
In Western Thrace in Greece, a legacy of the Ottoman Empire survives in the form of religious law (S...
This article examines the stereotyping of Islam both by advocates and academics in refugee rights ad...
Idea of human rights came from ancienit Greece. Rethought in renaissance period, accompain humankind...