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The ECtHR's Role as a Guardian of Discourse: Safeguarding a Decision-Making Process Based on Well-Established Standards, Practical Rationality, and Facts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2018
Abstract
This article argues that understanding the role of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR or the Court) to be that of a guardian of discourse would respect legitimate disagreement among pluralist democracies, while enabling the Court to safeguard human rights in a meaningful and effective way.
From the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR or the Convention) and the Court's jurisprudence, three basic standards of review can be distilled: First, wherever the Convention's requirements are sufficiently concrete, the Court holds contracting states to well-established standards. Second, when applying broad, abstract and relative Convention rights, the Court safeguards the practical rationality of a democratic decision-making discourse under the rule of law – a substantive review standard that is influenced by procedural factors. Third, the Court also needs to check the facts underlying the case, in order to render its control effective.
By setting ‘soft’ precedent in the form of factors that guide future decision-making without entirely prejudging it, and by taking into account second-order reasons concerning its legitimacy to intervene, the Court is acting as a second player in states’ decision-making discourse. Its task is not to replace the institutions originally responsible for taking the decision, but to ensure that they conform to their own role.
Keywords
- Type
- INTERNATIONAL LAW AND PRACTICE
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2018
References
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114 A violation was found on different grounds, ibid., at 43–7.
115 J.K. v. Sweden [GC], Judgment of 23 August 2016, [2016] ECHR (Appl. No. 59166/12), at 84, 112–23.
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148 Cf. Marguénaud, J.-P., ‘L'opinion séparée du juge siégeant à la Cour européenne des droits de l'homme au titre de l’État défendeur’, in Tituin, P. (ed), La conscience des droits: mélanges en l'honneur de Jean-Paul Costa (2011), 421 at 424–30Google Scholar.
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150 Maliks, R., ‘Kantian Courts: On the Legitimacy of International Human Rights Courts’, in Føllesdal, A. and Maliks, R. (eds.), Kantian Theory and Human Rights (2014), 153 at 168Google Scholar.
151 D. Spielman, Wither judicial dialogue?, Thomas More Lecture, 12 October 2015, at 4, available at www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Speech_20151012_Spielmann_Sir_Thomas_More_Lecture.pdf; Voeten supra note 147, at 428–30, finding no bias based on geopolitical affinities.
152 Gearty, supra note 89, at 131–60.
153 See for such an understanding: Letsas, supra note 9, at 39.
154 Waldron, supra note 132, at 1391.
155 See, e.g., Williams, A., ‘The European Convention on Human Rights, the EU and the UK: Confronting a Heresy’, (2013) 24 EJIL 1157, at 1182CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bellamy, supra note 92, at 246.
156 Waldron, supra note 132, at 1401 et seq.
157 See for this critique Popelier and van de Heyning, supra note 8, at 21.
158 Anchugov and Gladkov v. Russia, Judgment of 4 July 2013, [2013] ECHR (Appl. nos. 11157/04 and 15162/05), at 101–12.
159 B. v. Romania (No. 2), Judgment of 19 February 2013, [2013] ECHR (Appl. No. 1285/03), at 89.
162 See, e.g., Bărbulescu, supra note 55, at 139; cf. P. Sztompka, Trust, Distrust and the Paradox of Democracy (1997), at 16; von Bogdandy, A. and Venzke, I., ‘On the Functions of International Courts: An Appraisal in Light of Their Burgeoning Public Authority’, (2013) 26 LJIL 49, at 57CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
163 Forst, R., ‘The Justification of Human Rights and the Basic Right to Justification. A Reflexive Approach’, in Corradetti, C. (ed.), Philosophical Dimensions of Human Rights: Some Contemporary Views (2012), 81 at 87CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
164 Mendes, C., ‘Neither Dialogue nor Last Word’ (2011) 5 (1) Legisprudence 1, at 39–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see for further references on this common objection against deliberation Bächtiger and Wyss, supra note 141, at 158; cf. also Sweet, supra note 47, at 75.
165 Stephen, supra note 45.
166 High Level Conference on the Future of the European Court of Human Rights, Brighton Declaration, 20 April 2012, available at wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?id=1934031; see in detail Popelier and van de Heyning, supra note 8, at 7.
167 See the Opinion of the Court on Draft Protocol No. 15 to the ECHR, 6 February 2013, at 4, available at www.echr.coe.int/Documents/2013_Protocol_15_Court_Opinion_ENG.pdf; Explanatory Report on Protocol 15, 9: ‘It is intended . . . to be consistent with the doctrine of the margin of appreciation as developed by the Court in its case law’, available at www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Protocol_15_explanatory_report_ENG.pdf.
168 See, e.g., X. v. Germany, Commission Decision of 30 December 1975, [1975] ECHR (Appl. No. 5935/72), where, reflecting the deplorable but common scientific opinion at the time, the Commission held that there were grounds to discriminate against male homosexuals; similarly, the German Federal Constitutional Court in BVerfGE 6, 389; see also the US Supreme Court judgments in Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393 (Sup.Ct. 1857) or Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214 (Sup.Ct. 1944).
169 See for a strong critique of this Allan, J., ‘The Travails of Justice Waldron’, in Huscroft, G. (ed.), Expounding the Constitution: Essays in Constitutional Theory (2008), 161 at 167CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
170 See, e.g., the sizeable minority view by Judges López Guerra, Jungwiert, Jaeger, Villiger und Poalelungi in Axel Springer AG, supra note 95, contending that the threshold for the Court to intervene had not been reached.
171 Harbo, supra note 7, 45–6.
172 Wellmer, A., ‘Menschenrechte und Demokratie’, in Gosepath, S. and Lohmann, G. (eds.), Philosophie der Menschenrechte (1998), 265 at 272Google Scholar.
173 See, e.g., Case of Winterstein, supra note 100, at 148; Klatt, supra note 11, at 215; Zysset, A., ‘Searching for the Legitimacy of the European Court of Human Rights: The Neglected Role of “Democratic Society”’, (2016) 5 Global Constitutionalism 16, at 30–1CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
174 See, e.g., X and others v. Austria, Judgment of 19 February 2013, [2013] ECHR (Appl. No. 19010/07), at 99; cf. Arnardóttir, supra note 61, at 649 et seq., in particular at 664: ‘a priori suspect as not being legitimate reasons for differentiating between people’.
175 See for an enlightening baseball analogy in this regard R. Brandom, Making it Explicit: Reasoning, Representing, and Discursive Commitment (1994), 184.
176 Cf. on the institutional guarantee of deliberation Bächtiger and Wyss, supra note 141, at 159, 161.