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The Law of Human Rights

By Richard Clayton and Hugh Tomlinson

Reviews

  • Stunningly good, both in ambition and execution. This is a remarkable work...this is, to my knowledge, the only post-Act work that tackles the filed in so comprehensively systematic a way.- A. T. H. Smith, Professor and Dean of Law, Cambridge, Criminal Law Review
  • The definitive work at the dawn of the new human rights case law era itself at the beginning of the twenty-first century.Phillip Taylor, The Barrister

Description

  • A thoroughly revised and updated new edition of the leading practitioner text on the law of human rights, cited in no less than eight House of Lords judgments
  • An invaluable reference for human rights practitioners and academics alike
  • Fully updated since the first edition to cover the impact and consolidation of the Human Rights Act 1998 into domestic law
  • Contains new material on human rights law in South Africa and Scotland
  • Offers an up-to-date discussion of the European Convention on Human Rights
  • Contains a comprehensive treatment of the issues arising under the Human Rights Act 1998, such as the principles of proportionality, the nature of public authorities, and the developing rights of privacy
  • Includes a separate materials volume containing the Act, the Convention and all relevant international human rights instruments

Since it was first published in 2000, The Law of Human Rights has become the leading practitioner text in this rapidly developing area of law. Written by two leading silks, and a team of expert contributors, it provides comprehensive and systematic treatment of human rights law and practice in the UK, including an examination of the wider impact of the Human Rights Act 1998 upon the civil and criminal law. The second edition has been fully updated to provide detailed coverage of developments as the human rights legislation continues to be tested out in the courts, such as the principles of proportionality, the nature of public authorities, and the developing right of privacy. The authors have tracked the growing body of case law and the book includes comprehensive case references for the UK and other jurisdictions, including new sections on human rights law in South Africa and Scotland.

The Law of Human Rights is accompanied by a comprehensive materials volume including full text of the Act, the European Convention on Human Rights, and appendices considering human rights jurisprudence in relation to each Convention right dealing with the position in Scotland, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa.

The Law of Human Rights will be kept up to date by way of regular paperback supplements which provide full updates of relevant case law and legislation.

Readership: Solicitors and barristers in the UK, in particular those specializing in human rights and public law (constitutional and administrative), criminal law and related fields; the judiciary; government bodies and non-governmental organizations concerned with human rights and justice; individual academics and libraries specializing in human rights and public law in the UK and worldwide.

Contents
1. The Constitutional Protection of Human Rights

2. The Impact of Unincorporated Human Rights Treaties

3. The Human Rights Act: Interpretation and Synopsis

4. The Human Rights Act and Statute Law

5. Human Rights and Public Authorities

6. General Principles under the Convention

7. The Right to Life and the Abolition of the Death Penalty

8. Right not to be Subject to Torture or Inhuman or Degrading Treatment

9. Freedom from Slavery, Servitude, and Forced Labour

10. The Right to Liberty

11. Fair Trial Rights

12. The Right to Respect for Privacy and the Home

13. The Right to Marry and to Family Life

14. Freedom of Thought, Conscience, and Religion

15. Freedom of Expression

16. Freedom of Assembly and Association

17. Freedom from Discrimination in Relation to Convention Rights

18. Right to Enjoyment of Possessions

19. The Right to Education

20. Electoral Rights

21. Remedies under the Human Rights Act

22. Human Rights Act Procedure

23. Court of Human Rights Procedure


Authors, editors, and contributors

Richard Clayton, Barrister, 39 Essex Street Chambers and

Hugh Tomlinson, Barrister, Matrix Chambers

Contributors:Victoria Butler-Cole, Barrister, 39 Essex Street Chambers

Tessa Hetherington, Barrister, Matrix Chambers

Mathew Purchase, Barrister, Matrix Chambers

Karon Monaghan, Barrister, Matrix Chambers

Published Year: 2009
Format: Hard Back
ISBN: 978-0-19-926357-8
Publisher: Oxford University Press
No of Pages: 3350

Our Price: £ 245.00

Reviews: 0 reivew(s).

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