#38 - JRL 2007-55 - JRL Home
Date: Mon, 5 Mar 2007
From: Andreas Umland <andreumland@yahoo.com>
Subject: New Book: The Impact of the ECHR on Russian
Law
Anton Burkov
"The Impact of the European Convention on Human Rights on Russian Law:
Legislation and Application in 1996-2006. With a foreword by Francoise Hampson"
(=Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society. Vol. 45)
Stuttgart/Hannover: ibidem-Verlag 2007; 162 pp.; ISBN 978-3-89821-639-5;
EUR24.90
http://shop.strato.de/epages/Store8.sf/?ObjectPath=/Shops/61235722/Products/978-3-89821-639-5
http://www.amazon.de/European-Convention-Legislation-Application-1996-2006/dp/389821639X/ref=gfix-ews-form/303-9385888-0615444
This book analyzes the practice of Russia honoring her legal obligations
under the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR): to secure to everyone
within its jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in the Convention
(Article 1 of the ECHR). The study comes to the conclusion that the impact of
the ECHR on the Russian legal system, in terms of its implementation by domestic
courts, is unsatisfactory. The jurisprudence of the Supreme Court and Supreme
Arbitration Court is an attempt to demonstrate to the Council of Europe that the
ECHR is being applied, rather than to implement the ECHR. In contrast, the
jurisprudence emerging from decisions of the Russian Federation’s Constitutional
Court and district courts indicates a better understanding of the spirit of the
ECHR. Still, the rare instances in which domestic courts implemented the ECHR
were, more often than not, prompted by applicants’ arguments based on ECHR
case-law, rather than by the courts. The book suggests methods of ensuring a
more effective implementation of the ECHR’s provisions within Russian national
law. It develops recommendations on how to assess the Russian government’s
compliance with judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, and how to
interpret explanations submitted by Russia to the Secretary General of the
Council of Europe on her implementation of the ECHR.
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