The European Human Rights Law Review has just published a new issue (Issue 6, 2024). The issue contains one editorial, three research articles, three case comments and one book review. The articles focus on the topics of the construction of border walls and human rights, the living instrument doctrine of the ECtHR and the right to legal capacity of persons with dementia.
This is the table of contents:
* Kirsty Hughes, Stevie Martin and Stephanie Palmer, 'Northern Ireland, the Chagos Islands, and human rights developments and challenges in Westminster' (editorial)
* José Rogelio Gutiérrez Álvarez, 'Questioning the legality of border walls under international and regional human rights law' (research article)
* Konrad Ksiazek, 'The living instrument doctrine and effectiveness of human rights' (research article)
* Fiore Schuthof, 'Forget me not: the human right to legal capacity of persons with dementia' (research article)
* Veronica Botticelli, 'Beyond the divide: the human rights cost of borderisation in the ECtHR's Georgia v Russia (IV) merits judgment (case comments)
* Adam Ploszka, 'One step forward, two steps back: the European Court of Human Rights' approach to the criminalisation of begging' (case comments)
* Mattia Pinto, 'Do sex workers have a right to have rights? Let the state decide and criminalise, says the European Court of Human Rights' (case comments)