It is my great pleasure to announce the publication, today, of a co-edited by book professor Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir (University of Iceland) and myself (Utrecht University) on what we have dubbed the shifting gravities of the protection of human rights in the triangle: European Union, European Convention on Human Rights, and national jurisdictions. The full title: Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir and Antoine Buyse (eds.), Shifting Centres of Gravity in Human Rights Protection. RethinkingRelations between the ECHR, EU, and National Legal Orders (Routledge 2016). Our book includes contributions from a wide range of authors who are experts on one or several of the interlinkages in this human rights triangle. This is the abstract:
"The protection of human rights in Europe is currently at a crossroads. There
are competing processes which push and pull the centre of gravity of this
protection between the ECHR system in Strasbourg, the EU system in Luxemburg
and Brussels, and the national protection of human rights.
This book brings together researchers from the fields of international
human rights law, EU law and constitutional law to reflect on the tug-of-war
over the positioning of the centre of gravity of human rights protection in
Europe. It addresses both the position of the Convention system vis-à-vis the
Contracting States, and its positioning with respect to fundamental rights
protection in the European Union. The first part of the book focuses on
interactions in this triangle from an institutional and constitutional point of
view and reflects on how the key actors are trying to define their relationship
with one another in a never-ending process. Having thus set the scene, the
second part takes a critical look at the tools that have been developed at
European level for navigating these complex relationships, in order to identify
whether they are capable of responding effectively to the complexities of
emerging realities in the triangular relationship between the EHCR, EU law and
national law."
And this is the table of contents:
1. Introduction, Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir and Antoine Buyse
Part I: In Search of
a Centre of Gravity
2. The Paradox of Human Rights Protection in Europe:
Two Courts, One Goal? Xavier Groussot, Nina-Louisa Arold Lorenz and Gunnar Thor
Petursson
3. The Role of the European Court of Human Rights in the Changing
European Human Rights Architecture, Davíð Þór Björgvinsson
4. The European
Court of Human Rights and National Courts: A Constitutional Relationship?, Geir
Ulfstein
5. National Courts and Judicial Disobedience to the ECHR: A
Comparative Overview, Giuseppe Martinico
6. The Advisory Jurisdiction of the
ECtHR under Protocol No.16: Enhancing Domestic Implementation of Human Rights
or a Symbolic Step? Björg Thorarensen
Part II: European
Rights and National Implementation: Rethinking the status quo
7. Flying or
Landing? The Pilot Judgment Procedure in the Changing European Human Rights
Architecture Antoine Buyse
8. The Court of Justice and Fundamental Rights: If
Margin of Appreciation is the Solution, What is the Problem? Niamh Nic Shuibhne
9. From Flexible to Variable Standards of Judicial Review: The Responsible
Domestic Courts Doctrine at the European Court of Human Rights Başak Çalı
10.
Speaking the Same Language? Comparing Judicial Restraint at the ECtHR and the
ECJ Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir and Dóra Guðmundsdóttir
11. Squaring the Circe at
the Battle at Brighton: Is the War between Protecting Human Rights or
Respecting Sovereignty Over, or Has it Just Begun?, Andreas Follesdal.
Many thanks to all contributing authors!