The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?

Article 52(1) of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights lays down respect for the essence of right as one of the requirements that limitations on rights must respect. This provision is not innovative, as it formalizes into EU law the distinction between “core” and “periphery” of rights present in many...

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Main Authors: Takis Tridimas, Giulia Gentile
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2019-09-01
Series:German Law Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832219000634/type/journal_article
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author Takis Tridimas
Giulia Gentile
author_facet Takis Tridimas
Giulia Gentile
author_sort Takis Tridimas
collection DOAJ
description Article 52(1) of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights lays down respect for the essence of right as one of the requirements that limitations on rights must respect. This provision is not innovative, as it formalizes into EU law the distinction between “core” and “periphery” of rights present in many national constitutions and in the ECJ and ECtHR case law. Nonetheless, the express reference to essence has given unprecedented resonance to that concept. Essence as the “limit of limits” has a Janus-like character. On the one hand, it pronounces that every fundamental right bears a minimum content which is ringfenced from interference by public and private actors. On the other hand, it stresses the malleability of rights and their social function. The core/periphery dichotomy reflects a balancing act moored in European legal tradition whose symbolism outperforms its utility as a judicial tool. This Article examines the essence clause of the Charter in light of the ECJ case law and the constitutional traditions of the Member States and assesses its role in the framework of fundamental rights protection in EU law. The Article first attempts a classification of rights limitations clauses in national constitutions, following which it discusses the interpretation of essence by the Spanish and the Italian Constitutional Courts. The Article then engages with a theoretical discussion of the concept of essence and examines the case law of the ECJ. Lastly, it looks at the limitations of the concept as a rights protection instrument in EU law.
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spelling doaj.art-8bfbeae711d942e48fda070dce9568be2023-03-09T12:35:09ZengCambridge University PressGerman Law Journal2071-83222019-09-012079481610.1017/glj.2019.63The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?Takis TridimasGiulia GentileArticle 52(1) of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights lays down respect for the essence of right as one of the requirements that limitations on rights must respect. This provision is not innovative, as it formalizes into EU law the distinction between “core” and “periphery” of rights present in many national constitutions and in the ECJ and ECtHR case law. Nonetheless, the express reference to essence has given unprecedented resonance to that concept. Essence as the “limit of limits” has a Janus-like character. On the one hand, it pronounces that every fundamental right bears a minimum content which is ringfenced from interference by public and private actors. On the other hand, it stresses the malleability of rights and their social function. The core/periphery dichotomy reflects a balancing act moored in European legal tradition whose symbolism outperforms its utility as a judicial tool. This Article examines the essence clause of the Charter in light of the ECJ case law and the constitutional traditions of the Member States and assesses its role in the framework of fundamental rights protection in EU law. The Article first attempts a classification of rights limitations clauses in national constitutions, following which it discusses the interpretation of essence by the Spanish and the Italian Constitutional Courts. The Article then engages with a theoretical discussion of the concept of essence and examines the case law of the ECJ. Lastly, it looks at the limitations of the concept as a rights protection instrument in EU law.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832219000634/type/journal_articleEssence of rightsfundamental rightsEU Charter of Fundamental RightsEuropean Court of Justicenational constitutions
spellingShingle Takis Tridimas
Giulia Gentile
The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
German Law Journal
Essence of rights
fundamental rights
EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
European Court of Justice
national constitutions
title The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
title_full The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
title_fullStr The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
title_full_unstemmed The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
title_short The Essence of Rights: An Unreliable Boundary?
title_sort essence of rights an unreliable boundary
topic Essence of rights
fundamental rights
EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
European Court of Justice
national constitutions
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832219000634/type/journal_article
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