This chapter will explore the case of prisoner disenfranchisement in the United Kingdom (hereinafter UK) as a concrete example of political denialism and human rights. It will explore the basis of denialism and human rights, from two approaches, asking both how and why denialism is perpetrated and justified in the UK. Initially seeking to challenge how the blanket ban on prisoner voting is justified at a domestic level. The paper will then identify why political denialism is contentious within the concrete example that prisoner disenfranchisement provides, determining the conceptual and legal basis and subsequent political support for the prisoner voting ban
This paper takes seriously the objection that allowing prisoners to vote may have an impact on the o...
Embargo periods 2 gadi, kopš 08.05.2020.The right to participate in the governing of state is one of...
This book gives an overview of the introduction and evolution of the crime of denialism from synchro...
This chapter will explore the case of prisoner disenfranchisement in the United Kingdom (hereinafter...
Do prisoners’ rights matter? This paper examines this question through a social-legal study of one o...
Following the decision of the ECtHR in Hirst v UK, (Application no. 74025/01) the government indicat...
In 2005 the ECtHR ruled that the UK was in breach of Art. 3 of Protocol 1 (Hirst v. The United Kingd...
This article explores the case for excluding all prisoners from the electorate, and argues that the ...
In Hirst v UK, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the UK must end its blanket ban on conv...
This paper considers the justifiability of removing the right to vote from those convicted of crimes...
Drawing on and combining political science and legal frameworks, this article explores the validity ...
The article begins by locating human rights law within the current political context before moving o...
This article looks at voting rights for sentenced prisoners in the UK. A number of approaches are ad...
In the dispute between Strasbourg and Westminster over prisoners’ voting rights, the arguments of bo...
To remove the right of prisoners to vote does many things. … It signals that whatever the prisoner s...
This paper takes seriously the objection that allowing prisoners to vote may have an impact on the o...
Embargo periods 2 gadi, kopš 08.05.2020.The right to participate in the governing of state is one of...
This book gives an overview of the introduction and evolution of the crime of denialism from synchro...
This chapter will explore the case of prisoner disenfranchisement in the United Kingdom (hereinafter...
Do prisoners’ rights matter? This paper examines this question through a social-legal study of one o...
Following the decision of the ECtHR in Hirst v UK, (Application no. 74025/01) the government indicat...
In 2005 the ECtHR ruled that the UK was in breach of Art. 3 of Protocol 1 (Hirst v. The United Kingd...
This article explores the case for excluding all prisoners from the electorate, and argues that the ...
In Hirst v UK, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the UK must end its blanket ban on conv...
This paper considers the justifiability of removing the right to vote from those convicted of crimes...
Drawing on and combining political science and legal frameworks, this article explores the validity ...
The article begins by locating human rights law within the current political context before moving o...
This article looks at voting rights for sentenced prisoners in the UK. A number of approaches are ad...
In the dispute between Strasbourg and Westminster over prisoners’ voting rights, the arguments of bo...
To remove the right of prisoners to vote does many things. … It signals that whatever the prisoner s...
This paper takes seriously the objection that allowing prisoners to vote may have an impact on the o...
Embargo periods 2 gadi, kopš 08.05.2020.The right to participate in the governing of state is one of...
This book gives an overview of the introduction and evolution of the crime of denialism from synchro...