European judges in Strasbourg have recently been called on to decide on some important issues concerning discriminatory treatment in the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms protected by the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and its protocols. Moving from different grounds of discrimination, it is possible to find a common leitmotif in the judgments delivered by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR): the main idea is that the attempts to limit discrimination in the member states of the Council of Europe (CoE) are even more pronounced nowadays. Roma, women, religious minorities, and homosexual couples have thus found a reinforced protection in Strasbourg..
The legal system of the Council of Europe is of crucial importance for the protection of women’s rig...
The non-discrimination provisions in EU law and in the ECHR have a different background and the Cour...
The increasing religious diversity in western Europe poses challenges for courts, including the Euro...
European judges in Strasbourg have recently been called on to decide on some important issues concer...
The Strasbourg Court’s recent approach to the interpretation of the non-discrimination norm under Ar...
Being increasingly called upon to express its opinion on measures that directly or indirectly give r...
The Strasbourg-based Court and Commission of Human Rights have both attached great importance to the...
The obligation of states to implement the European Court of Human Rights case-law and the potential ...
Since the mid-1990s, the European Court of Human Rights has had before it a number of cases concerni...
A discourse about the new forms of democratic governance and the challenges facing the traditional o...
Through redrafting the judgments of the ECHR, Diversity and European Human Rights demonstrates how t...
A right to equality and non-discrimination is widely seen as fundamental in democratic legal systems...
The Prohibition of Discrimination as a Legal Problem in the Case Law of the European Court of Human ...
Published online: 24 June 2016‘All Europeans, not only minority populations, tend to lack awareness ...
textabstractThis article argues that it is no longer tenable to qualify the Court's non-discriminati...
The legal system of the Council of Europe is of crucial importance for the protection of women’s rig...
The non-discrimination provisions in EU law and in the ECHR have a different background and the Cour...
The increasing religious diversity in western Europe poses challenges for courts, including the Euro...
European judges in Strasbourg have recently been called on to decide on some important issues concer...
The Strasbourg Court’s recent approach to the interpretation of the non-discrimination norm under Ar...
Being increasingly called upon to express its opinion on measures that directly or indirectly give r...
The Strasbourg-based Court and Commission of Human Rights have both attached great importance to the...
The obligation of states to implement the European Court of Human Rights case-law and the potential ...
Since the mid-1990s, the European Court of Human Rights has had before it a number of cases concerni...
A discourse about the new forms of democratic governance and the challenges facing the traditional o...
Through redrafting the judgments of the ECHR, Diversity and European Human Rights demonstrates how t...
A right to equality and non-discrimination is widely seen as fundamental in democratic legal systems...
The Prohibition of Discrimination as a Legal Problem in the Case Law of the European Court of Human ...
Published online: 24 June 2016‘All Europeans, not only minority populations, tend to lack awareness ...
textabstractThis article argues that it is no longer tenable to qualify the Court's non-discriminati...
The legal system of the Council of Europe is of crucial importance for the protection of women’s rig...
The non-discrimination provisions in EU law and in the ECHR have a different background and the Cour...
The increasing religious diversity in western Europe poses challenges for courts, including the Euro...