Within a year, the European Court of Human Rights has delivered six judgments in cases where domestic violence has been the core issue: Kurt v. Austria (a Grand Chamber judgment); Tkhelidze v. Georgia; Tunikova and Others v. Russia; A and B v. Georgia, Y and Others v. Bulgaria, and Landi v. Italy. This case note focuses on the first five cases, which confirmed the need to adapt the Osman test to ‘the particular context of domestic violence’ as previously established in Opuz, Volodina, and Talpis. They aim to provide greater clarity with respect to key aspects of the test, specifically in relation to the relevance of the ‘context of domestic violence’ for the assessment of lethal risk, the impact of domestic violence on children, and the use...
Traditionally, international law understood the concept of state accountability only in the context ...
In its recent jurisprudence on domestic violence, the European Court of Human Rights started to exam...
Provides a perspective of Opuz v. Turkey, Europe’s landmark judgment on violence against women
Within a year, the European Court of Human Rights has delivered six judgments in cases where domesti...
The purpose of this contribution is to analyse three recent judgments rendered by the European Court...
The purpose of this contribution is to analyse three recent judgments rendered by the European Court...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This Reflection draws on the judgment handed down by the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter...
This Reflection draws on the judgment handed down by the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter...
Any assessment of the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Right’s (ECtHR) in the field of v...
Domestic violence has existed in rudimentary forms of the family, and has persisted until today. It ...
This paper deals with the issue of the protection of persons from domestic violence in the jurisprud...
Traditionally, international law understood the concept of state accountability only in the context ...
In its recent jurisprudence on domestic violence, the European Court of Human Rights started to exam...
Provides a perspective of Opuz v. Turkey, Europe’s landmark judgment on violence against women
Within a year, the European Court of Human Rights has delivered six judgments in cases where domesti...
The purpose of this contribution is to analyse three recent judgments rendered by the European Court...
The purpose of this contribution is to analyse three recent judgments rendered by the European Court...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This comment is meant as a first reaction to the Talpis v. Italy judgment, rendered by the European...
This Reflection draws on the judgment handed down by the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter...
This Reflection draws on the judgment handed down by the European Court of Human Rights (hereinafter...
Any assessment of the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Right’s (ECtHR) in the field of v...
Domestic violence has existed in rudimentary forms of the family, and has persisted until today. It ...
This paper deals with the issue of the protection of persons from domestic violence in the jurisprud...
Traditionally, international law understood the concept of state accountability only in the context ...
In its recent jurisprudence on domestic violence, the European Court of Human Rights started to exam...
Provides a perspective of Opuz v. Turkey, Europe’s landmark judgment on violence against women