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The legitimacy of the European human rights regime – a view from the United Kingdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2019

TAMAS GYORFI*
Affiliation:
School of Law, University of Aberdeen, Taylor Building, AB24 3UB, United Kingdom

Abstract:

The purpose of the present article is threefold. First, my ambition is to improve the analytical framework that is used to assess the legitimacy of the European Court of Human Rights. The Court’s authority can neither be established nor refuted by a single master-argument. Instead, what we need is a careful balancing exercise and this piece aims to set out the main elements of the justificatory equation. Second, using this framework, I intend to put forward the outline of a coherent critique of the European human rights regime. Third, I hope that my article is able to shed light on why it is natural to expect more vocal criticism from the United Kingdom than from most other member states of the Council of Europe.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

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References

1 Helfer, LR, ’Redesigning the European Court of Human Rights: Embeddedness as a Deep Structural Principle of the European Human Rights Regime’ (2008) 19 European Journal of International Law 125, 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 Izmir Declaration, para 15, adopted at the High Level Conference on the Future of the European Court of Human Rights, Izmir (2011).

3 Brighton Declaration, section G, adopted at the High Level Conference on the Future of the European Court of Human Rights, Brighton (2012).

4 See also The Brussels Declaration, adopted at the High-level Conference on the ‘Implementation of the European Convention on Human Rights, Our Shared Responsibility’, Brussels (2015) and the Copenhagen Declaration, adopted at High-Level Conference on Reform of the Convention System, Copenhagen (2018). The individual justice versus constitutional justice debate does not tackle the issue of legitimacy head on. This debate is extensively discussed in Greer, S and Wildhaber, L, ‘Revisiting the Debate about “constitutionalising” the European Court of Human Rights’ (2012) 12 Human Rights Law Review 655.Google Scholar Additionally, the question of how international courts can be more effective is different from the one of why we need them. See Helfer, LR and Slaughter, AM, ‘Toward a Theory of Effective Supranational Adjudication’ (1997) 107 Yale Law Journal 273.Google Scholar Nevertheless some commentators argue for reopening the debate on legitimacy. For such an example, see Christoffersen, J, ‘Individual and Constitutional Justice: Can the Power Balance of Adjudication Be Reversed?’ in Christoffersen, J and Madsen, MR (eds), The European Court of Human Rights between Law and Politics (Oxford University Press, Oxford 2011) 181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar ‘It is now time to look beyond the horizon and reconsider the power balance between national and international authorities.’ Ibid 181.

5 Spano, R, ‘Universality or Diversity of Human Rights? Strasbourg in the Age of Subsidiarity’ (2014) 14 Human Rights Law Review 487.Google Scholar This criticism culminated in the Draft Brighton Declaration that was leaked by the Guardian on 28 February 2012. According to this draft, the Court should override a state’s interpretation only if the ‘national court clearly erred in its interpretation or application of the Convention rights’.

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7 Spano (n 5) 488.

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9 I have elaborated a conceptual framework for assessing the justification of domestic constitutional review in Gyorfi, T, Against the New Constitutionalism (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar The present article is, to some extent, the extension of this conceptual framework to international human rights adjudication.

10 Andreas Follesdal’s balancing approach is perhaps the closest to my position. See Follesdal, A, ‘Subsidiarity and International Human-Rights Courts: Respecting Self-Governance and Protecting Human Rights—Or Neither?’ (2016) 79 Law & Contemporary Problems 147.Google Scholar However, by balancing similar considerations, we end up with very different conclusions. See also Follesdal, A, ‘The Legitimacy of International Human Rights Review: The Case of the European Court of Human Rights’ (2009) 40 Journal of Social Philosophy 595;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Follesdal, A, ‘The Legitimacy Deficits of the Human Rights Judiciary: Elements and Implications of a Normative Theory’ (2013) 14 Theoretical Inquiries in Law 339.Google Scholar

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14 This does not imply the claim that there is no European public sphere or that some elements of a European-wide political community do not exist.

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24 Art 149(1) of the Austrian constitution refers back to the general rights of nationals enshrined in the Basic Law of 21 December 1867.

25 Constitution of Spain, art 10(2); Constitution of Portugal, art 16(2).

26 As the Görgülü decision of the German Constitutional Court (FCC) states, ‘the guarantees of the Convention influence the interpretation of the fundamental rights and constitutional principles of the Basic Law. The text of the Convention and the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights serve, on the level of constitutional law, as guides to interpretation in determining the content and scope of fundamental rights and constitutional principles of the Basic Law, provided that this does not lead to a restriction or reduction of protection of the individual’s fundamental rights under the Basic Law – and this the Convention itself does not desire.’ 111 BVerfGE 307, 317. In a later decision, the FCC seems to give even stronger status to the jurisprudence of the Strasbourg court. 128 BVerfGE, 326, 370-371.

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31 Secretary of the State for the Home Department v AF (No3) [2009] UKHL 28, [2010] 2 AC 269, para 98.

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40 However, a belief that is justifiable in A’s belief system is not neccessarily the one that is presently held by A.

41 Helfer and Slaughter (n 4) 368. For a similar position, see Benvenisti (n 37) 843.

42 Rawls (n 38) 144.

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45 The UK Supreme Court (and its predecessor, the House of Lords) has also been referring to foreign law extensively. See Gyorfi, T, ‘The Supreme Court (House of Lords) of the United Kingdom’ in Jakab, A, Dyevre, A and Itzcovich, G (eds), Comparative Constitutional Reasoning (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2017) 679722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Richard Clayton makes the interesting point that since the HRA came into force, the highest court of the UK pays less attention to Commonwealth jurisdictions. Clayton, R, ‘Should the English Courts under the HRA Mirror the Strasbourg Case Law?’ in Ziegler, KS, Wicks, E and Hodson, L (eds), The UK and European Human Rights: A Strained Relationship? (Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2015) 107–8.Google Scholar If that is true, UK judges have not become more cosmopolitan, but have simply reoriented their comparative approach.

46 Spano (n 5) 492.

47 For a summary of this new approach, see Gerards and Fleuren (n 23) 52–71.

48 Copenhagen Declaration, adopted at High-Level Conference on Reform of the Convention System, Copenhagen (2018) 28(c).

49 Spano (n 5).

50 P Mahoney, ‘The Relationship between the Strasbourg Court and the National Courts – As Seen from Strasbourg’ in Ziegler, Wicks and Hodson (n 45) 25.

51 J Gerards, ‘The European Court of Human Rights’ in Jakab, Dyevre and Itzcovich (n 45).

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56 J Rackow, ‘From Conflict to Cooperation: The Relationship between Karlsruhe and Strasbourg’ in Ziegler, Wicks and Hodson (n 45) 387.

57 I am aware that this is not the conventional meaning of authentic interpretation.

58 The three qualifications I made about the primacy of the Strasbourg court above also apply to this claim.

59 Kavanagh (n 54) 1024.

60 Dworkin, R, Taking Rights Seriously (Duckworth, London, 1977) 85.Google Scholar

61 However, some commentators jump from the need to protect minority rights directly to the legitimacy of ECtHR without even trying to establish that domestic courts are unable to fulfil this function. See Benvenisti (n 37) 848–50.

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63 The analysis of the present paragraph relies on the dataset of Boix, C, Miller, M and Rosato, S, ‘A Complete Data Set of Political Regimes, 1800–2007’ (2013) 46 Comparative Political Studies 1523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

65 The data about the number of violations are available at: <www.echr.coe.int>.

66 C Hillebrecht, ‘The Power of Human Rights Tribunals: Compliance with the European Court of Human Rights and Domestic Policy Change’ (2014) 20 European Journal of International Relations 1100, 1114.

67 Madsen (n 17) 169–70. It is worth mentioning that some of the Russian criticisms come from the Constitutional Court of Russia. See A Burkov: ‘How to Improve the Results of a Reluctant Player: The Case of Russia and the European Convention on Human Rights’ in Flogaitis et al. (n 8)

68 ‘Britain Could Become Belarus If It Abandons Human Rights Legislation, Warns Attorney General’ The Telegraph (9 October 2012).

69 Moravcsik (n 16).

70 Ginsburg, Judicial Review in New Democracies: Constitutional Courts in Asian Cases (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2003) 25.

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75 Available at <www.reputationinstitute.com/research/Country-RepTrak.aspx>. (Iceland is second on the EIU’s ranking, but it is not monitored by the Reputation Institute.)

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77 Ibid 25–32.

78 ibid 26–32.

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81 However, it has to be mentioned that material inducement was also an important motivating factor for many countries since ratifying the ECHR was a precondition of EU membership.

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83 E Voeten, ‘Politics, Judicial Behaviour, and Institutional Design’ in Christoffersen and Madsen (n 4) 67–9.

84 Ibid 73.

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86 ‘Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s Speech at the 25th Bálványos Summer Free University and Student Camp’. Available at <www.kormany.hu/en/the-prime-minister/the-prime-minister-s-speeches/prime-minister-viktor-orban-s-speech-at-the-25th-balvanyos-summer-free-university-and-student-camp>.

88 Responding to the critiques of the recent attack on the judiciary, Poland’s Justice Minister, Zbigniew Ziobro’s reply is replete with references to respect (‘We expect and demand respect’, for example). ‘EU-Poland Row Gets Personal as War of Words Heats up’ Euronews (27 July 2017). Available at <www.euronews.com/2017/07/27/eu-poland-row-gets-personal-as-war-of-words-heats-up>

89 As of writing this article, Hungarian streets are full of posters declaring that ‘Hungary is a proud and strong European nation’.

90 For using honour as an analytical category and applying it to Russian foreign policy, see Tsygankov, AP, Russia and the West from Alexander to Putin: Honor in International Relations (Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

91 ‘Orbán Defiant as EU Parliament Considers Sanctions on Hungary’ Guardian (11 September 2018).

92 Bryant, C, Parliament: The Biography (Volume I: Ancestral Voices) (Transworld, London, 2015) 1617.Google Scholar

93 Lord Hoffmann (n 33) 417.

94 Luebbe-Wolff (n 20) 97–8. Of course, Brexit puts the above argument in a new and very different international context. However, at present, it would be premature to speculate on the potential effects of Brexit on the protection of human rights in the UK.

95 Waldron, J, Dignity, Rank, and Rights (The Berkeley Tanner Lectures) (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2012) 54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

96 Luebbe-Wolff (n 20) 98.

97 O’Boyle (n 6) 1867.

98 Spano (n 5) 493.

99 Moravcsik (n 16) 237.

100 I am grateful to one of the anonymous reviewers for drawing my attention to this point.

101 In addition, the proponents of the ECtHR should also establish that we need a court to influence the behaviour of member states and ‘less drastic means’ are not available.

102 Goodman and Jinks (n 12) 629.

103 Madsen (n 17) 173.

104 Alter, KJ, Helfer, LR and Madsen, MR, ‘How Context Shapes the Authority of International Courts’ (2016) 79 Law and Contemporary Problems 1, 10.Google Scholar

105 Greer and Wildhaber (n 4) 665; Hillebrecht (n 71) 283–4.