Article contents
The Doctrine of Equivalent Protection: Its Life and Legitimacy Before and After the European Union's Accession to the European Convention on Human Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Extract
The relationship between the Court of Justice of the European Union (henceforth: Luxembourg Court) and the European Court of Human Rights (henceforth: Strasbourg Court) has been one of the prevailing issues in the human rights debate in Europe. The main crater in the relationship between the two courts is the fact that Strasbourg could not call directly into responsibility the Luxembourg Court due to the fact that EU is not a party in the ECHR, whereas the Luxembourg Court is not likely to obey a Strasbourg ruling without having any international legal obligation to do so. This situation has thus far led to many observations that have called for the accession of the EU to the ECHR, a step that would legalize the relationship between the EU and the Council of Europe, offering critics of human rights an assurance that the EU's human rights regime will become externally controlled by a specialized human rights court.
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References
1 We use the term Luxemburg Court to connote any instance of the Court of Justice of EC/EU.Google Scholar
2 We use the term Strasbourg Court to connote any instance of the European Court of Human Rights.Google Scholar
3 E.g. Shelton, Dinah, The Boundaries of Human Rights Jurisdiction in Europe 13 Duke J. Comp. & Int'l L. 95 (2003)Google Scholar
4 View how the Luxembourg Court, the EU member states’ courts and the Strasbourg Court manage to cooperate, at Charles Sabel & Oliver Gerstenberg, Constitutionalising an Overlapping Consensus: The ECJ and the Emergence of a Coordinate Constitutional Order 16(5) Eur. L. J. 511–550 (2010); see a more general overview of the relationship between the two European courts, at Paul Craig & Gráinne de Búrca, EU Law: Text, Cases and Materials 418–426. (2008).Google Scholar
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8 It is worth recalling that the responsibility to deal with human rights from the European Union side – and accordingly to construe human rights law – was first built with the Van Gend en Loos case of the Luxembourg Court. The Luxembourg Court, nevertheless, self-managed to further its competence to deal with human rights and to wear the EU with human rights obligations with the Internationale Handelgesellschaft case, and later with Nold KG case, where it made an explicit reference for the first time to the international human rights treaties ratified by the member states of the EU. This was later advanced with Hauer v. Land Rheinland-Pfalz, where the Luxembourg Court for the first time openly referred to the ECHR. The human rights catalogue of the EU was later proclaimed for the first time with the Charter of Fundamental Rights in 2000, as a domestic list of rights and freedoms. The Lisbon Treaty, on the other hand, provided for the first time a treaty ground for the legal effect of the Charter of Fundamental Rights, making the EU regime of human rights have a treaty ground for its human rights law. (See Van Gend en Loos v. the Netherlands, case 26/62 [1963] ECR1; Internationale Handelgesellschaftmbh v. Einfuhr und Vorratsstelle für Getreide und Futtermittel (case 11/70), 1970, ECR 1125; Nold KG v. Commission, case 4/73 [1974] ECR 491; Hauer v. Land Rheinland-Pfalz, Judgment of the Court of 13 December 1979, case 44/79 [1979] ECR 3727.)Google Scholar
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