- Part I. The European Convention on Human Rights in context
- The European Convention on Human Rights in context
- Part II. Enforcement machinery
- Admissibility of applicants / Paul Harvey
- The European Court of Human Rights : organization, practice, and procedure / Krešimir Kamber
- The execution of the court's judgments
- Part III. The rights guaranteed
- Article 2 : the right to life
- Article 3 : freedom from torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
- Article 4 : freedom from slavery, servitude, or forced or compulsory labour
- Article 5 : the right to liberty and security of the person
- Article 6 : the right to a fair trial
- Article 7 : freedom from retroactive criminal offences and punishment
- Article 8 : the right to respect for private and family life, home, and correspondence / Michelle Lafferty
- Article 9 : freedom of thought, conscience, and religion / Peter Cumper
- Article 10 : freedom of expression
- Article 11 : freedom of assembly and association
- Article 12 : the right to marry and to found a family
- Article 13 : the right to an effective national remedy
- Article 14 (freedom from discrimination in respect to protected convention rights) and Protocol 12 (non-discrimination in respect of 'any right set forth by law')
- Article 15 : derogation in time of war of other public emergency threatening the life of the nation
- Articles 16-18 : other restrictions upon the rights protected
- Article 1, first protocol : the right to property
- Article 2, first protocol : the right to education
- Article 3, first protocol : the right to free election / Heather Green
- The fourth, sixth, seventh, and thirteenth protocols.
Now in its fourth edition, Harris, O'Boyle, and Warbrick's Law of the European Convention on Human Rights, remains an indispensable resource for undergraduates, postgraduates, and practitioners alike. The new edition builds on the strengths of previous editions, providing an up-to-date, clear, and comprehensive account of Strasbourg case law and its underlying principles. It sets out and critically analyses each Convention article (including those addressed by relevant Protocols), and thoroughly examines the system of supervision. The book also addresses the pressures and challenges facing the Strasbourg system in the twenty-first century.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)