In the 2012 audit of UK democracy, Stuart Wilks-Heeg, Andrew Blick, and Stephen Crone discussed the role of the UK in promoting democracy and human rights overseas. They found the UK purports to set itself high standards in this area, and has made progress recently by agreeing new international human rights instruments. Our relationship with the European Convention on Human Rights suggest a desire to weaken international standards, however, and our support for human rights is also conditioned by political and commercial concerns
The UK Government has, in recent years, repeatedly pushed for replacing the Human Rights Act (HRA) w...
This spring the EU is reconsidering, debating and reformulating its future foreign policy agenda. Dr...
The premise of my research is an understanding of human rights not only as a technical, legal discou...
William Hague’s assertion that human rights should constitute the “irreducible core” of foreign poli...
David Cameron recently announced his intention to repeal the Human Rights Act were his Conservative ...
The government’s recent proposal for intervention in Syria was rejected by Parliament. The debate ra...
In the contemporary political world order that continues to be structured by the principle of nation...
The United Kingdom has come into the new millennium with an unprecedented written set o...
Human rights law has long been a bug-bear of the Conservative right, with critics of the Human Right...
The prime minister has made clear his intention to ‘repatriate’ human rights jurisdiction back from ...
As part of the 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Stuart Brown examines the extent to which the UK’s partic...
Les droits de l’homme au Royaume-Uni sont un objet de vif débat, à la frontière entre le domaine jur...
This article critically appraises the extent that the UK Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Right...
International Human Rights Courts (IHRCts), such as the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), have...
Democratic Audit UK has long led the way in assessing the health, strength and durability of UK demo...
The UK Government has, in recent years, repeatedly pushed for replacing the Human Rights Act (HRA) w...
This spring the EU is reconsidering, debating and reformulating its future foreign policy agenda. Dr...
The premise of my research is an understanding of human rights not only as a technical, legal discou...
William Hague’s assertion that human rights should constitute the “irreducible core” of foreign poli...
David Cameron recently announced his intention to repeal the Human Rights Act were his Conservative ...
The government’s recent proposal for intervention in Syria was rejected by Parliament. The debate ra...
In the contemporary political world order that continues to be structured by the principle of nation...
The United Kingdom has come into the new millennium with an unprecedented written set o...
Human rights law has long been a bug-bear of the Conservative right, with critics of the Human Right...
The prime minister has made clear his intention to ‘repatriate’ human rights jurisdiction back from ...
As part of the 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Stuart Brown examines the extent to which the UK’s partic...
Les droits de l’homme au Royaume-Uni sont un objet de vif débat, à la frontière entre le domaine jur...
This article critically appraises the extent that the UK Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Right...
International Human Rights Courts (IHRCts), such as the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), have...
Democratic Audit UK has long led the way in assessing the health, strength and durability of UK demo...
The UK Government has, in recent years, repeatedly pushed for replacing the Human Rights Act (HRA) w...
This spring the EU is reconsidering, debating and reformulating its future foreign policy agenda. Dr...
The premise of my research is an understanding of human rights not only as a technical, legal discou...