Human Rights

Beyond Disagreement Open Remedies in Human Rights Adjudication

By Aruna Sathanapally
Oxford University Press October 2012

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199669301
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
October 2012
Format
Hardback , 256 pages
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • The first book to examine declarations of incompatibility in human rights law in theoretical and comparative perspective
  • Provides a comparative analysis of open remedies in UK human rights law, using examples drawn from the US, Canada, South Africa, Australia, and internationally
  • Addresses important gaps in the empirical understanding of the Human Rights Act model of rights protection, advancing understanding of the practical operation of human rights instruments

Examining the role of 'open remedies' in human rights adjudication, this book provides a new perspective informing comparative constitutional debates on how to structure institutional relationships over fundamental rights and freedoms.

Open remedies declare a human rights violation but invite the other branches of government to decide what corrective action should be taken. Open remedies are premised on the need to engage institutions beyond courts in the process of thinking about and acting on human rights problems. This book considers examples across the United States, South Africa, Canada, and internationally, emphasising their similarities and differences in design and the diverse ways they could operate in practice. 

The book investigates these possibilities through the first systematic legal and empirical study of the declaration of incompatibility model under the United Kingdom Human Rights Act. This new model provides a non-binding declaration that the law has infringed human rights standards, for the legislature's consideration. By design, it has the potential to support democratic deliberation on what human rights require of the laws and policies of the State, however, it also carries uncertainties and risks.

Providing a lucid account of existing debates on the relative roles of courts and legislatures to determine the requirements of fundamental rights commitments, the book argues that we need to look beyond the theoretical focus on rights disagreements, to how these remedies have operated in practice across the courts and the political branches of government. Importantly, we should pay attention to the nature and scope of legislative engagement in deliberation on the human rights matters raised by declarations of incompatibility. Adopting this approach, this book presents a carefully argued view of how courts have exercised this power, as well as how the UK executive and Parliament have responded to its use.

Readership: Students and scholars of human rights law, human rights, and comparative law

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: Typology and Interactions
1: Open Remedies in Human Rights Adjudication
2: The Role of the Legislature
3: From Dialogue to Engagement
Part II: Declarations of Incompatibility in the Courts
4: The Criteria for a Declaration of Incompatibility
5: Judicial Restraint and Activism Considered
Part III: Responsive Deliberation in Practice
6: The Pattern of Institutional Dialogue
7: Remedial Deliberation in the Legislature
8: Belmarsh Prisoners and Dialogue over Control Orders
9: Epilogue
Conclusion
Bibliography

About the Author

Aruna Sathanapally, Consultant, McKinsey and Company

Dr Aruna Sathanapally is lawyer who completed her doctorate in law at the University of Oxford, as a Menzies Scholar and a John Monash Scholar. She clerked for the President of the NSW Court of Appeal and has worked on a wide range of human rights matters.

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