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Law Notes Constitutional Law Notes

Hra Protection Of Human Rights Notes

Updated Hra Protection Of Human Rights Notes

Constitutional Law Notes

Constitutional Law

Approximately 588 pages

Constitutional Law notes fully updated for recent exams at Oxford and Cambridge. These notes cover all the LLB public law cases and so are perfect for anyone doing an LLB in the UK or a great supplement for those doing LLBs abroad, whether that be in Ireland, Hong Kong or Malaysia (University of London). Please note that all previous edition authors gained 1st class marks in their exams, and the 2016 notes are also of a high 1st standard, but the author just happened to become seriously ill befor...

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HRA – Protection of human rights

[HRA overall effects]

  1. Broad constitutional changes

    1. HRA punctures the distinction between legal and political constitutionalism by enabling national courts to invoke binding norms of international law as an effect constraint upon a legislative branch that is confined only by the force of politics

    2. Transforms SOP from a persuasive force, as in Fire Brigades Union, to a legally enforceable principle through Art. 6 ECHR – right to independent trial – e.g. Anderson

  2. Emboldening the judiciary

    1. Has perhaps irrevocably changed the attitude of courts – empowering them to think they have free range to create their own inherent jurisdiction – changing relationship between courts and legislature – spillover outside direct effect

      1. Cited in run up to Jackson, where courts suggest it might overturn AoP if it threatens judicial review in Lord Hope’s dicta

      2. Use of extreme interpretive techniques in Evans v AG, Ahmed v HM Treasury – a novelty

  3. Technical effects

    1. Makes enactment of ECHR-incompatible legislation more politically difficult & less likely in the first place

      1. S.19 requires P upon second reading of a Bill in HoC to make a declaration of compatibility, or refuse and pass it anyway – alerting P to the consequences of ECHR incompatible statutes, and raises the political stakes of enacting them

        1. Select committees scrutinize and check if government is making a right call, & joint committee on HR scrutinizes these declarations

      2. Generally adds to political impetus for P to not legislate contrary to ECHR – S.3/4

    2. Introduce formal means of correcting ECHR incompatible primary legislation, where there previously was none

      1. No common law equivalent of S.3/4, given doctrine of PS, a novel means of constraining P in protection of HR

    3. More stringent judicial review for executive actions

      1. Courts endowed with power to strike down any decision/delegated legislation where admin body is exercising discretion by S.6, where before, the principle of legality only applies where there is general or ambiguous words, and where limited common law rights are contravened

      2. Proportionality test replacing Wednesbury test of unreasonableness for standard of judicial review with respect to admin bodies contravening qualified convention rights

        1. More stringent test – not whether the decision is justifiable, but whether it is in fact the right one

    4. Spillover to other topics

      1. SOP

        1. S.6 shifts balance of power between executive & judiciary towards the latter – improves ability to exercise the check & balance function

        2. Art. 6 converts SOP into a legal doctrine in a limited way – protects courts having sole purview for judicial functions (Anderson)

      2. RoL

        1. Common law rights already cover grounds of formative RoL conception with respect to procedural rights & access to courts

        2. Improves substantive (Allan, Dworkin) RoL conception, by giving more substantive rights legal effect

          1. Art. 11 – Freedom of assembly and association

          2. Art. 8 – Right to privacy

          3. Art. 14 – Discrimination

      3. PS

        1. Unaffected. S.3-4 explicitly state the validity and continued operation of AoPs are untouched

  4. General normative debate (Hickman)

    1. View 1: Incorporationists/ HR-focused

      1. Believes that HR should be put beyond the reach of parliamentary majorities – instead should be transformed into a form of higher law protected by judges

      2. DOIs should be rarely issued – use s.3 interpretative technique instead

      3. Problem: pushing the boundaries of S.3 interpretation threatens to violate appropriate relationship between courts and Parliament

      4. Fails to explain the dialogic features of the HRA and the relationship between protecting rights and preserving PS

    2. View 2: Participatory democracy/ dialogic perspective

      1. Believe that rights are far too controversial and important to be removed from people and entrusted to judges

      2. Tension between attributing people the autonomy and responsibility to bear rights while denying them the ability to decide amongst themselves what limits on their conduct this status entails

      3. HRA is viewed not as an institutional platform from removing issues FROM political debate but enabling courts to participate IN the debate – establishes dialogue between courts Parliament and executive

        1. S.5 HRA: notifying relevant government minister and hearing their view)

        2. S.4 DOI: HRA s.10 provides that DOI triggers an executive power for fast-track amendment – reconceptualises the SOP where the courts become repositioned within the forum of politics, providing not a check or balance, but counsel

      4. Problem: Sees HRA as a means to provide individuals with political participation rather than protection

    3. Middle ground: Strong form dialogue

      1. Protection aspect –

        1. Courts have a vital constitutional role in protecting fundamental principles from the sway of popular sentient [HR aspect]

      2. Dialogic aspect –

        1. Courts don’t exert these principles in isolation – they work in collaboration with other branches in evolving them and fostering their acceptance

      3. No rigid parcelling of policy to execs and principle to courts – there is overlap and exchange; but exchange is not conflation and courts insulate fundamental principles even in the face of such compromise!

      4. Dicey reconciles a judicial function in protecting society’s LT values with a supreme legislature mostly pursuing ST goals

        1. To understand this idea of constitutionalism not by examining which branch has the final word, but by looking at how they interact and collaborate

    4. How s.3 and s.4 fit into this:

      1. Erroneous to see s3 in terms of incorporationalism and s4 in terms of dialogue

        1. Ultimately depends on context, the proper limits of judicial law-making and the dictates of prudence

      2. S.3: relevant in determining the balance between giving legal effect to HR and allowing S.4 to be used

        1. Hence, s.3 should not be interpreted too minimally or maximally

      3. S.4: places court in an unfamiliar advisory position – but less strong position because DOIs...

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