A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence

<p>Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights ostensibly provides absolute protection against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Despite what the Court says, this protection is not unqualified. Article 3 now embodies a two-tiered protection, with torture alone...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Simonsen, NJ
Other Authors: Lazarus, L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
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author Simonsen, NJ
author2 Lazarus, L
author_facet Lazarus, L
Simonsen, NJ
author_sort Simonsen, NJ
collection OXFORD
description <p>Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights ostensibly provides absolute protection against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Despite what the Court says, this protection is not unqualified. Article 3 now embodies a two-tiered protection, with torture alone attracting a ‘special stigma’. This hierarchical approach is traceable to the seminal decision of <em>Ireland v United Kingdom</em>, and Part A of this thesis demonstrates that it is deeply flawed. The hierarchy between torture and other forms of ill-treatment (the <em>Ireland</em> hierarchy) has become entrenched in the Court’s case law. It continues to manifest in the Court’s narrow definition of torture, and its expansive interpretation of inhuman and degrading treatment. This thesis argues that the growing breadth of the latter concept has occurred in tandem with, and may partly explain, the rapid increase in the number of Article 3 violations found by the Court each year. These developments have carried important consequences. There have been policy consequences for the member states in areas such as national security (where deportation of terrorist suspects is sought to be used as a policy tool) and prisoners’ rights (where the proportionality of sentences, conditions of detention and administrative penalties within prisons, are all now subject to European supervision). In addition to the policy consequences, the expanding second tier of the <em>Ireland</em> hierarchy has carried legal consequences for the Court’s conception of Article 3. It has compelled the Court to introduce limiting devices into its case law on inhuman and degrading treatment. The introduction of these limiting devices, into what is an ostensibly unqualified domain, challenges the position of Article 3 as an absolute right.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:15749b05-60e9-4057-a21c-f330085839e92025-02-03T13:30:14ZA critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudenceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:15749b05-60e9-4057-a21c-f330085839e9TortureCriminal Law / Human rightsCriminology / Security,Rights and JusticeHuman rightsPublic international lawCriminal Law / Public international lawEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2012Simonsen, NJLazarus, L<p>Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights ostensibly provides absolute protection against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Despite what the Court says, this protection is not unqualified. Article 3 now embodies a two-tiered protection, with torture alone attracting a ‘special stigma’. This hierarchical approach is traceable to the seminal decision of <em>Ireland v United Kingdom</em>, and Part A of this thesis demonstrates that it is deeply flawed. The hierarchy between torture and other forms of ill-treatment (the <em>Ireland</em> hierarchy) has become entrenched in the Court’s case law. It continues to manifest in the Court’s narrow definition of torture, and its expansive interpretation of inhuman and degrading treatment. This thesis argues that the growing breadth of the latter concept has occurred in tandem with, and may partly explain, the rapid increase in the number of Article 3 violations found by the Court each year. These developments have carried important consequences. There have been policy consequences for the member states in areas such as national security (where deportation of terrorist suspects is sought to be used as a policy tool) and prisoners’ rights (where the proportionality of sentences, conditions of detention and administrative penalties within prisons, are all now subject to European supervision). In addition to the policy consequences, the expanding second tier of the <em>Ireland</em> hierarchy has carried legal consequences for the Court’s conception of Article 3. It has compelled the Court to introduce limiting devices into its case law on inhuman and degrading treatment. The introduction of these limiting devices, into what is an ostensibly unqualified domain, challenges the position of Article 3 as an absolute right.</p>
spellingShingle Torture
Criminal Law / Human rights
Criminology / Security,Rights and Justice
Human rights
Public international law
Criminal Law / Public international law
Simonsen, NJ
A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title_full A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title_fullStr A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title_full_unstemmed A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title_short A critique of the decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Ireland v United Kingdom, and its effect on Article 3 jurisprudence
title_sort critique of the decision of the european court of human rights in ireland v united kingdom and its effect on article 3 jurisprudence
topic Torture
Criminal Law / Human rights
Criminology / Security,Rights and Justice
Human rights
Public international law
Criminal Law / Public international law
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