The Human Rights of Companies
Exploring the Structure of ECHR Protection
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 26 January 2006
- ISBN 9780199289837
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages272 pages
- Size 241x163x22 mm
- Weight 560 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
This book studies the response of the European Court of Human Rights to complaints submitted to it by companies and their shareholders. It presents the first in-depth analysis of the protection of business interests under the European Convention on Human Rights, and a path-breaking study of the value-system on which the ECHR builds.
MoreLong description:
This book studies the response of the European Court of Human Rights, the international court that supervises governmental compliance with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), to complaints submitted to it by companies and their shareholders. The protection of business vis-à-vis governmental regulation is hardly the main concern of international human rights law, yet it is not disputed that companies, and their owners, in principle enjoy protection under the ECHR. Such complaints are not unproblematic for the Court in Strasbourg, however.
This book analyses the Court's reasoning in three groups of cases in which they have presented difficult issues of treaty interpretation. As the case law is streamlined in a minimalist fashion which obscures the Court's rationale, the book construes the structural framework within which the Court operates and explains how the relevant case law is largely coherent when considered against the general structure of ECHR protection.
This book is the first major study of the protection of business enterprise under the European Convention on Human Rights and thus an invaluable guide to understanding how the Court in Strasbourg responds to corporate complaints. More importantly, by focusing on a field of European human rights law that is regarded by many as marginal and even objectionable, the book reveals the fundamental structures of European human rights protection, where the protection of economic activity and corporate life is regarded as inseparable from core values of the ECHR such as an effective political democracy and the rule of law.
..this thorough and thoughtful study is most welcome. No-one who is interested in this critical subject can afford to ignore this book.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Companies and the Structure of Convention Protection
The Court's Approach to Corporate Personality
The Court's Response to Hard Cases of Applicability
Lenient Standards of Scrutiny
Retrospect and Prospect