This article offers a critical approach of the ways the European Court of Human rights deals with scientific knowledge or its lack in the cases linked to healthy and environmental issues. It shows that the Court adopts two types of strategies : (1) the easiest one occurs when unanimous national studies have concluded to a risk and a causal link or when the thresholds have been clearly exceeded ; (2) the more difficult cases are connected to ongoing scientific controversy and/or uncertainty. In such cases the ECtHR, surprisingly, does not even attempt to seek truth beyond the information given by the respondent State and, taking the easiest way out, hides behind the margin of appreciation doctrine. This study questions the continuation of th...
In April 2011, University College Dublin (UCD) School of Law research students held their Fifth Annu...
When determining whether a state should be granted the margin of appreciation, often the European Co...
AbstractReasoning refers to the application of the rule, once interpreted, to the facts of the cause...
Cet article propose une lecture critique de l’appréhension de la connaissance scientifique ou de son...
The European Court of Human Rights stands before what may be its greatest challenge: addressing curr...
 Ethics is constantly topical, and times of economic crises, issues of migration and refugees, ...
This article studies the development and current practice of the European Court of Human Rights when...
This article analyses the developing approach of the European Court of Human Rights to the indicatio...
<p>The present paper analyzes the jurisprudence coming from the European Court of Human Rights...
Human rights problems exist all over Europe. Although the European Court of Human Rights is competen...
Despite several attempts to access the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the EU is still n...
The uncertainty of empirical assertions is a pervasive problem in litigation before the EU Court of ...
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) does not mandate any particular format when forensic...
This article examines the European Union (EU) legal requirements contained in secondary law and in t...
A full understanding of how courts handle complex scientific questions is essential to appreciating ...
In April 2011, University College Dublin (UCD) School of Law research students held their Fifth Annu...
When determining whether a state should be granted the margin of appreciation, often the European Co...
AbstractReasoning refers to the application of the rule, once interpreted, to the facts of the cause...
Cet article propose une lecture critique de l’appréhension de la connaissance scientifique ou de son...
The European Court of Human Rights stands before what may be its greatest challenge: addressing curr...
 Ethics is constantly topical, and times of economic crises, issues of migration and refugees, ...
This article studies the development and current practice of the European Court of Human Rights when...
This article analyses the developing approach of the European Court of Human Rights to the indicatio...
<p>The present paper analyzes the jurisprudence coming from the European Court of Human Rights...
Human rights problems exist all over Europe. Although the European Court of Human Rights is competen...
Despite several attempts to access the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the EU is still n...
The uncertainty of empirical assertions is a pervasive problem in litigation before the EU Court of ...
The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) does not mandate any particular format when forensic...
This article examines the European Union (EU) legal requirements contained in secondary law and in t...
A full understanding of how courts handle complex scientific questions is essential to appreciating ...
In April 2011, University College Dublin (UCD) School of Law research students held their Fifth Annu...
When determining whether a state should be granted the margin of appreciation, often the European Co...
AbstractReasoning refers to the application of the rule, once interpreted, to the facts of the cause...