Cosmopolitan Legal Order

£48.99

Cosmopolitan Legal Order

Kant, Constitutional Justice, and the European Convention on Human Rights

Political science and theory Public international law: human rights Public international law: international organizations and institutions Social and political philosophy

Authors: Alec Stone Sweet, Clare Ryan

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 8th May 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9780192559173


Introduction

In this book, Alec Stone Sweet and Clare Ryan provide an accessible introduction to Kantian constitutional theory and the law and politics of European rights protection.

Part I: Kantian Blueprint

Part I sets out Kant's blueprint for achieving Perpetual Peace and constitutional justice within and beyond the nation state.

Part II: Cosmopolitan Legal Order

Part II applies these ideas to explain the gradual constitutionalization of a Cosmopolitan Legal Order: a transnational legal system in which justiciable rights are held by individuals; where public officials bear the obligation to fulfill the fundamental rights of all who come within the scope of their jurisdiction; and where domestic and transnational judges supervise how officials act.

Such an order was instantiated in Europe through the combined effects of Protocol no. 11 (1998) to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) and the incorporation of the Convention into national law.

European Court of Human Rights

The authors then describe and assess the strengthening of the European Court's capacities to meet the challenge of chronic failures of protection at the domestic level; its progressive approach to the "qualified" rights covering privacy and family life, and the freedoms of expression, conscience, and religion; the robust enforcement of the "absolute" rights, including the prohibition of torture and inhuman treatment; and its determined efforts to render justice to all people that come under its jurisdiction, including non-citizens whose rights are violated beyond Europe.

Today, the Strasbourg Court is the most active and important rights-protecting court in the world, its jurisprudence a catalyst for the construction of a cosmopolitan constitution in Europe and beyond.

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