Human Rights Law Courts and Procedure

Subsidiarity, Legitimacy, and the European Court of Human Rights `

By Reto Walther
New Arrival Oxford University Press April 2026

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780198921424
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
April 2026
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

Often accused of illegitimate interference with its member states' political choices, the European Court of Human Rights, like other international institutions operating outside of any democratic polity, faces serious concerns about its democratic legitimacy. The subsidiarity principle - enshrined in the Preamble to the European Convention on Human Rights like in many other international treaties - thus emerged in response to calls for the Court to be markedly subsidiary to its member states and their democratic authorities.

Exploring the subsidiarity principle as underpinning the entire European Convention on Human Rights system, Subsidiarity, Legitimacy, and the European Court of Human Rights sketches out the historical, political, and legal contestations through which this principle gained prominence. It presents two key arguments: first, that the Court's subsidiary role is justified as it brings democratic politics into the Convention system; and second, that this role explains and justifies the relative lack of principled - and highly casuistic - jurisprudence. The Court's casuistry is a prerequisite of the two-way process that allows a democratic bottom-up development of a Convention law that the Court may, hence legitimately, reimpose on the states.

Subsidiarity, Legitimacy, and the European Court of Human Rights is the first book-length analysis of the ECHR from a separation-of-powers perspective, offering a compelling defence of subsidiarity as crucial to the democratic legitimacy of the ECHR, which contains insights relevant to many international treaty systems.

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.

Table of Contents

1:International Authority: Legitimacy through Subsidiarity? The Case of the Strasbourg Court
2:An Approximation to Subsidiarity
3:The Rise of Subsidiarity in the Convention System
4:The Concerns behind the Court's Subsidiary Role
5:Liberal Rights and Democratic Politics
6:The Court Between Law and Politics
7:Rights: Moral Truths or Political Claims?
8:The Court's Subsidiary Role
9:Interpretation and the Court's Subsidiary Role
10:Review and the Court's Subsidiary Role
Epilogue
HKD 1,324.05 −3%
HKD 1,365.00

Inclusive of HK delivery

Ready to ship
Delivery Time: around 4-5 weeks
Extra 10 working days if shipping address outside Hong Kong
  • Free HK shipping over HK$1,000
  • International shipping to 35+ countries
Order Form
Save

Recommended

You may also be interested in these books:

More titles from Law

View all