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Book Title: The European Court of Human Rights and its Discontents
Editor(s): Flogaitis, Spyridon; Zwart, Tom; Fraser, Julie
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN (hard cover): 9781782546115
Section Title: Contents
Number of pages: 2
Extract:
Contents
Acknowledgements vii
List of contributors viii
Foreword H.E. Ivo Opstelten x
Table of Cases xiv
Table of Legislation xx
1. Introduction: The need for both international and national
protection of human rights the European challenge 1
Anthony Bradley
2. Criticism and case-overload: Comments on the future of the
European Court of Human Rights 9
Luzius Wildhaber
3. The European Court of Human Rights and its ever-growing
caseload: Preserving the mission of the Court while ensuring the
viability of the individual petition system 18
Paul Mahoney
4. Is the European Court of Human Rights on a slippery slope? 27
Marc Bossuyt
5. Why much of the criticism of the European Court of Human
Rights is unfounded 37
Egbert Myjer
6. Challenges facing the European Court of Human Rights:
Fragmentation of the international order, division in Europe
and the right to individual petition 54
Lucian Bojin
7. Britain must defy the European Court of Human Rights on
prisoner voting as Strasbourg is exceeding its authority 65
David Davis
8. More human rights than Court: Why the legitimacy of the
European Court of Human Rights is in need of repair and how
it can be done 71
Tom Zwart
v
vi The European Court of Human Rights and its discontents
9. The vital relationship between the European Court of Human
Rights and national courts 96
Wilhelmina Thomassen
10. The need for dialogue between national courts and the European
Court of Human Rights 104
Lord Kerr
11. Interaction between the ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2013/773.html