“Hard Power” and the European Convention on Human Rights
Samenvatting
The European Convention on Human Rights is now crucial to decisions to be taken by the military and their political leaders in ‘hard power’ situations – that is, classical international and non-international armed conflict, belligerent occupation, peacekeeping and peace-enforcing and anti-terrorism and anti-piracy operations, but also hybrid warfare, cyber-attack and targeted assassination. Guidance is needed, therefore, on how Convention law relates to these decisions.
That guidance is precisely what this book aims to offer. It focuses primarily on States’ accountability under the Convention, but also shows that human rights law, used creatively, can actually help States achieve their objectives.
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
Chapter 2 Problems of Substantive Convention Law in Relation to ‘Hard Power’
Chapter 3 Interplay between the Convention and International Humanitarian Law
Chapter 4 Derogation220
Chapter 5 Jurisdiction of the Contracting States
Chapter 6 Typology of Article 1 Jurisdiction in ‘Hard Power’ Situations
Chapter 7 Jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights
Chapter 8 Attribution
Chapter 9 Summary and Conclusions
References
Notes
Index
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