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Diversity and European Human Rights: Rewriting Judgments of the ECHR By Eva Brems Cambridge University Press. 2013. £80.00 (hb). 495 pp. ISBN: 9781107026605

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Martin Curtice*
Affiliation:
Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, Juniper Centre, Moseley Hall Hospital, Alcester Road, Moseley, Birmingham B13 8JL, UK. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2013 

This is an original, innovative academic tome. Under the leadership of an eminent human rights professor, a group of international researchers tackled the ‘magic mountain’ of case law from the European Court of Human Rights. The book concentrates on the often neglected situation of diverse non-dominant groups: children, gender, religious, sexual and cultural minorities, and people with disability. The collective aim of the authors was described as ‘the emancipation of non-dominant groups through a change in culture’. The book's innovative character lies with the invention of a new method for reviewing previous epoch-making case law. The authors, experts in their given areas, were to ‘put themselves in the Court's shoes’ in their critical analysis of key judgments (rather than the ‘traditional method of external scientific analysis’). It is this method of analysis which makes the book very readable, and although it is, of course, legally technical in places (but not overwhelmingly so for legal novices), it has a surprisingly conversational reading style, which is impressive given the diversity of contributing authors.

Each chapter provides detailed research into the topic under analysis, often advancing the cases being analysed by using more recent jurisprudence and international human rights law and, in effect, bringing the cases up to date. Following such analysis, the salient part of the original judgment is revisited and revised accordingly. Overall, I found the analysis more interesting than the actual judgment revisions.

One of the main aims of the book was to transform academic views into judicial language. In all, 18 judgments were reviewed. Interestingly, only eight of these cases found that the original human rights non-violation became a violation. However, while the other ten cases were unaltered in terms of the violation or non-violation of Convention rights, the judgments were invariably amended and enhanced by the authors following their critiques.

Of the cases analysed several stood out. For example, V v. UK concerned the trial of an 11-year-old boy, one of two killers in the notorious murder of the 2-year-old boy James Bulger in 1993. While a shocking case, the judgment was seminal in that it set important standards for the fair trial of children in adult courts. Another case, that of A, B and C v. Ireland, analysed the emotive, highly restrictive abortion laws in Ireland. Deschomets v. France looked at a decade-long custody battle underscored by a religious disagreement leading to a family crisis. Leyla Sahin v. Turkey considered the case of a medical student having been denied access to enrolment in university due to wearing a hijab and hence being discriminated against on grounds of her religion.

The disability section is the most readable for psychiatrists. The three chapters consider the right to treatment (and specifically, of expensive assistive devices to enhance personal autonomy) of people with a physical disability; the impact of unnecessary institutionalisation on the personal life of an individual who has been granted a conditional discharge under the Mental Health Act 1983 (Kolanis v. UK); and probably the most important chapter revisiting the case of Herczegfalvy v. Austria, which for more than two decades has been considered the benchmark case for psychiatric treatment in terms of Article 3 rights (freedom from inhuman and degrading treatment). I found this chapter riveting in its detail and elucidation of how such a case should be considered nowadays and I very much suspect this chapter is prophetic of what is to come in this clinical area.

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