What is it about?

The reluctance of Council of Europe member states to challenge each other at the bar of Europe, through the litigation of inter-state cases at the European Court, used to be a regular feature of the Strasbourg system. However, conflicts of different kinds in eastern Europe have led to a surge of such cases in recent years, as well as the introduction of thousands of related individual applications. The serious challenges presented, in particular by conflict-related cases, have led some commentators to question whether they can feasibly remain part of the Strasbourg process. For others, the focus should rather be on how such cases can be more effectively processed and assessed. This article emphasises the significance of both inter-state cases in general, and of cases arising from armed conflict (including individual applications): their political and legal importance; their centrality to the European human rights system; and how vital they are for individual victims of human rights violations. It analyses a number of controversial or challenging aspects of the adjudication of these cases, and puts forward some proposals for reform.

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Why is it important?

This is important because more and more of these cases are being taken to the European Court of Human Rights.

Perspectives

The article includes aspects written as a commentator, and also insights from practice too.

Philip Leach
Middlesex University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: On Inter-State Litigation and Armed Conflict Cases in Strasbourg, The European Convention on Human Rights Law Review, March 2021, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/26663236-bja10014.
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