Product details
- Categories: European Convention on Human Rights
- Publisher: Intersentia Uitgevers
- ISBN: 9781780686837
- Publication Date: 10/11/2018
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 372
- Language: English
Summary
Tort law and human rights belong to different areas of law, namely
private and public law. Nevertheless, the European Convention on Human
Rights increasingly influences national tort law of signatory states,
both on the vertical level of state liability and on the horizontal
level between private persons.
An individual can appeal to the
European Convention on Human Rights in order to challenge national tort
law in two situations: where he is held accountable under national tort
law for exercising his Conventions rights, and where national law does
not provide effective compensation in accordance with Article 13. The
second method is strongly connected with the practice of the European
Court of Human Rights to award compensations itself on the basis of
Article 41. A compensation in national tort law is considered to be
effective according to Article 13 when it is comparatively in line with
the compensations of the European Court of Human Rights granted on the
basis of Article 41. This raises the important question as to how
compensations under Article 41 are made by the European Court of Human
Rights.
The European Convention on Human Rights as an Instrument of Tort Law
examines the entanglement of public and private and national and
transnational law in detail and argues that while the Court uses a
different terminology, it applies principles that are very similar to
those of national tort law and that the Court has developed a
compensatory practice that can be described as a tort law system.