The human rights of companies: exploring the structure of ECHR protection
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Table of contents Klappentext Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVIII, 239 S. |
ISBN: | 0199289832 9780199289837 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Emberland, Marius |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The human rights of companies |b exploring the structure of ECHR protection |c Marius Emberland |
250 | |a 1. publ. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Oxford [u.a.] |b Oxford Univ. Press |c 2006 | |
300 | |a XXVIII, 239 S. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
610 | 1 | 4 | |a Cour européenne des droits de l'homme |
610 | 2 | 4 | |a European Court of Human Rights |
630 | 0 | 4 | |a Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms |d (1950) |
650 | 4 | |a Convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales - (1950) | |
650 | 4 | |a Droits de l'homme (Droit international) - Europe | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociétés - Aspect moral - Europe | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociétés - Droit - Europe | |
650 | 4 | |a Ethik | |
650 | 4 | |a Menschenrecht | |
650 | 4 | |a Human rights |z Europe | |
650 | 4 | |a Corporation law |z Europe | |
650 | 4 | |a Corporations |x Moral and ethical aspects |z Europe | |
651 | 4 | |a Europa | |
856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip062/2005030310.html |3 Table of contents | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Passau |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014727348&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Klappentext |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-014727348 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804135246644379648 |
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adam_text | This book studies the response of the European Court
of Human Rights, the international court that
supervises governmental compliance with the
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), to
complaints submitted to it by companies and their
shareholders. The protection of business
governmental regulation is hardly the main concern of
international human rights law, yet it is not disputed
that companies, and their owners, in principle enjoy
protection under the ECHR. Such complaints are not
unproblematic for the Court in Strasbourg, however.
This book analyses the Court s reasoning in three
groups of cases which have presented difficult issues
of treaty interpretation. As the case law is streamlined
in a minimalist fashion which obscures the Court s
rationale; this book construes the structural framework
within which the Court operates and explains how the
relevant case law is largely coherent when considered
against the general structure of ECHR protection.
This book is the first major study of the protection
of business enterprise under the ECHR and thus an
invaluable guide to understanding how the Court in
Strasbourg responds to corporate complaints. More
importantly, by focussing on a field of European
human rights law that is regarded by many as
marginal and even objectionable, the book reveals the
fundamental structures of European human rights
protection, where the protection of economic activity
and corporate life is regarded as inseparable from core
values of the ECHR such as an effective political
democracy and the rule of law.
Dr Marius
Faculty of Law of the University of Oslo.
THE HUMAN RIGHTS OFCOMPANIES EXPLORING THE STRUCTURE OFECHR PROTECTION
MARIUS EMBERLAND OXFORD UNIVBRSITY PRESS TABLE OFCONTENTS TABLE OFCASES
XVI TABLE OF LEGAL INSTRUMENTS XXIII LIST OFABBREVIATIONS XXV 1
INTRODUCTION 1 A OBJECT AND PURPOSE 1 1 THE COUPLING OF BUSINESS AND
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS 1 2 THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION AND
CORPORATE RIGHTS 2 3 EXPOSING THESTRUCTUREOFECHRPROTECTION 4 B OVERVIEW
6 C MATERIALS 8 D COMPANIES AND THE ECHR: AN OVERVIEW 10 1 THE COMPANY:
PROTAGONIST OF PRIVATE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE 10 2 COMPANIES AND THE ECHR:
BASIC FACTS 13 3 THE SYSTEM OF PRIVATE APPLICATION: OVERVIEW 14 (A)
THEADMISSIBILIRYSTAGE 14 (B) EXAMINATION ON THE MERKS 16 4 PROVIDING A
STRUCTURAL FRAMEWORK: PRELIMINARY ISSUES 17 (A) IHE REGULATOR/ STATE AND
THE NATUREOF ECHR OBLIGATIONS 17 (B) ECHRCOMPUEANCE 18 (C) THE COURT S
METHODOLOGY AND MODE OFREASONING 20 (I) THETELEOLOGICALAPPROACH 20 (II)
THE COURTS MINIMALIST REASONING 22 2 COMPANIES AND THE STRUCTUIE OF
CONVENTION PROTECTION 25 A AN OCCASIONAL SENSE OF CONTROVERSY 26 1
VBICES OF DISSENT: THE UNITED KNGDOMS ECHR DISCOURSE 26 (A) A CONCEPTUAL
MISMATCH? 27 (B) IDEOLOGICAL AND POLITICAL MOTIVES 28 (C)
DISPROPORTIONAL LMGIOUSADVANTAGES 29 (D) CONSIDERATIONS OF SYMMETRY AND
MERIT 31 2 THE ECHR S SINGULAR HUMAN RIGHTS IDEOLOGY 32 B TREATY TEXT
AND DRAFTING HISTORY 32 1 THE TEXT READ IN ISOLATION 33 2 TACIT
ACCEPTANCE IN THE TRAVAUX PRTPARATOIM 35 XII TABLE OF CONTENTS C THE
CONVENTIONS VALUE SYSTEM 36 1 THE PREAMBLES SIGNIFICANCE 36 2 INDIVIDUAL
DIGNITY 37 3 DEMOCRACY 39 (A) DEMOCRACY S IMPORTANCE 40 (B) THE
PRE-EMINENCE OFPOLITICAL DISCOURSE 41 (C) PRIVATE ENTERPRISE AND LIBERAL
DEMOCRACY 42 4 THERULEOFLAW 44 (A) THE CONVENTIONS RULE OFLAW PRINCIPLE
44 (B) THE RULE OFLAW AND COMPANIES 46 5 EUROPEAN LIBERALISM 47 (A)
EUROPEAN LIBERALISM AS CONVENTION VALUE 47 (B) LIBERALISM AND COMPANIES
RIGHTS 48 (C) FREE ENTERPRISE AND EUROPEAN INTEGRATION 50 D
CONSIDERATION OF WHOSE INTERESTS? 51 1 WHAT KINDS OF RIGHTS AND
FREEDOMS? 51 (A) COLLECTIVE AND INDIVIDUAL ASPECTS OF CONVENTION RIGHTS
52 (B) ECONOMIC ASPECTS OFCIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS 54 2 OBJECTIVE AND
INSTRUMENTAL FUNCTIONS OF CONVENTION PROTECTION 57 (A)
THESUBJECTIVEAPPROACH 57 (B) THE OBJECTIVE APPROACH 58 3 PUBLIC
INTERESTS 60 (A) COMMUNITY INTERESTS 60 (B) SOVEREIGNTYCONCERNS 62 E A
MANY-SIDED CONVENTION 63 3 THE COURT S APPROACH TO CORPORATE PERSONALITY
65 A THE VICTIM REQUIREMENT AND SHAREHOLDERS CLAIMS 67 1 THE VICTIM
REQUIREMENT 67 2 SHAREHOLDING AND ECHR PROTECTION 69 (A) PROTECTION OF
SHAREHOLDERS RIGHTS 69 (I) SHARES AS PROPERTY 70 (II) SHAREHOLDER
RIGHTS 71 (B) PROTECTION OF SHAREHOLDER INTERESTS: IDENTIFICATION CLAIMS
73 (I) THE RIGHTS/INTERESTS DISTINCTION 73 (II) VEIL-PIERCING ZA
STRASBOURG 74 B THE STARTING POINT: PRESERVATION OF CORPORATE
PERSONALITY 76 1 STARTING POINT: NO IDENTIFICATION 76 (A) THEAGROTACIM
CASE 76 (B) THE REACH OF AGROTEXIM 78 2 EXPLORING THE COURTS APPROACH:
DIE GIVEN JUSTIFICATIONS 80 (A) DUEFICULTIES IN DETERMINING WHO CAN
REPRESENT THE COMPANY IN STRASBOURG 80 (I) THEREASONMG 80 (II)
SUFFICIENDYCOHERENT? 81 TABLE OF CONTENTS XIII (B) UNREASONABLE
APPLICATION OF THE LOCAL REMEDIES RULE 83 (I) THEREASONING 83 (II)
SUFECIENDYCOHERENT? 84 (C) THE COMPARATIVE LEGAL CONTEXT 87 (I)
CONSTITUTIONAL SOLUTIONS 87 (II) THE BARCELONA TRACTTONCHAAEON 88 3 THE
AGROTEXIM APPROACH IN CONTEXT 89 (A) CONCERNFOR THE COMPANY S
FUNDAMENTAL ATTRACTIVENESS 90 (B) STRUCTURAL ASPECTS OF CONVENTION
PROTECTION 92 (I) SUBSIDIARITY 92 (II) DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTATION 93 (III)
CONCERNFOR NATIONAL INTERESTS 93 C DISREGARD FOR THE CORPORATE VEIL IN
EXCEPTIONAJ CIRCUMSTANCES 95 1 THE IMPOSSIBILITY EXCEPTION 95 (A)
IMPOSSIBILITY ASGROUND FOR ADMISSIBILITY 95 (B) THE IMPOSSIBILITY
EXCEPTIONS RATIONALE 97 (I) NORISKOFCOMPETING CLAIMS 97 (II) THE COURT
ASCERTAINS ERRECTIVE PROTECTION OF CENTRAL CONVENTION VALUES 98 2
THE VEHIDE APPROACH 99 (A) THEAPIPROACHOIPINCVAUCYVIRCLAND 99 (B)
EXPLAINING THE FEHICLE APPROACH 101 (I) NORISKOFCOMPETING CLAIMS 101
(II) EFFECTIVE PROTECTION OF SHAREHOLDER INVESTMENT 102 3 APRAGMATIC
OVERALL ASSESSMENT 104 D CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS 108 4 THE COURT S
RESPONSE TO HARD CASES OF APPLICABILITY 110 A HARD CASES OF
APPLICABILITY 110 B OBJECT AND PURPOSE AS ARGUMENTS AGAINST
APPLICABILITY 112 1 ARTICLE 8(1): BUSINESS PREMISES AS A COMPANYS HOME
113 (A) A DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE PRIVATE SPHERE AND GENERAL PRIVATE
ACRIVKY 113 (B) ARTICLE 8 PRIMARILY PROTECTS THE NATURAL PERSON 114 (C)
ABSENCEOF FIT WITHPHILOSOPHICALJUSTIFICATIONS 116 2 ARTICLE 10(1):
(CORPORATE) COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION 117 (A) DEFINING COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION
117 (B) THE RARIONALE FOR FREE EXPRESSION DOES NOT FIT 119 (I) THE
DEMOCRACY ARGUMENT 120 (UE) INDIVIDUAL SDF-FULFILMENT 121 (III) PURSUIT
OF TRUTH 122 3 ARTICLE 41: COMPANIES COMPENSARION FOR NON-PECUNIARY
LOSS 122 (A) COGENTREASONSFORCONCERN? 122 (B) CONTESTED OPINIONS AND
PROBABLE CAUSES 124 (I)
DIFECULTIESMDETENNIRUNGMEMEANINGOFNON-RXAUIIARYLOSS 124 (II) RHETORICAL
MCOMPATIBILITY 126 XIV TABLE OF CONTENTS C THE COURT S FAVOURABLE
RESPONSE 128 1 ARTICLE 10 AND CORPORATE COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION:
AUTRONICAGVSWITZERLAND 129 2 ARTIDE 41 AND MONETARY COMPENSATION FOR
NON-PECUNIARY LOSS: COMINGERSOUESA V PORTUGAL 130 3 ARTICLE 8 AND
CORPORATE HOME PROTECTION: COLAS EST SA AND OTHERS V FRANCE 132 D
AREVAMPEDTELEOLOGY 134 1 RATIONALIZING THE COURT S APPROACH 134 (A)
AVANT-GARDE ]WISPIADENCE 134 (B) AREVAMPEDTELEOLOGY 135 2 PRAGMATISM 137
3 SECURING OBJECTIVENESS 139 (A) EQUALTREATMENTOFLNDISTINGUISHABLE CASES
139 (B) RULE OFLAW 141 (C) COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS
PROTECTION 143 (I) COLLECTIVISM IN ARTIDE 41 143 (II) ARTIDE 8:
COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OF PRIVACY 144 (III) THE PUBLIC ASPECTOFFREE SPEECH
PROTECTION 145 4 PROGRESSIVENESS 147 (A) RELIANCE UPON PRIOR CASE LAW
147 (B) ANALOGOUS MATTERS ONLY 148 (I) ARTIDE 8 148 (II) ARTIDE 10 149
(III) ARTIDE 41 150 (C) PROGRESSIVE REASONING AS LEGITIMATING FACTOR 151
(D) A COMMENT ON THE DYNAMIC INTERPRETATION IN COLAS EST 152 E SUMMARY
OBSERVATIONS 153 5 LENIENT STANDAIDS OF REVIEW 155 A CONFLICTING
INTERESTS AND THE NECESSITY CRITERION 157 1 THE PUBLIC-PRIVAIE TENSION:
NECESSITY AND PROPORTIONALITY 158 (A) NECESSITY 159 (B) THE
PROPORTIONALITY ASSESSMENT 160 2 THE SUPRANATIONAL DIMENSION: THE MARGIN
OFAPPRECIATION DOCTRINE 161 (A) THE MARGIN OFAPPRECIARION DOCTRINE 161
(B) ITS HOLE IN THE ASSESSMENT OF NECESSITY 162 B INTRODUCING THE TWO
STANDARDS OF REVIEW 163 1 ARTIDE 10(2): THE MARKT INTERN STANDARD 164
(A) INTRODUCING THE STANDARD 164 (B) THE ELEMENTS OFLENICNCY 165 (C) THE
MARKT INTERN APPROACH PREVAILS 167 (I) THE CURRENCYOF THE STANDARD 16
(II) DOUBT AS TO WHETHER STATEMENTS ARE COMMERDAL 170 TABLE OF
CONTENTS XV 2 ARTICLE 8(2): THE COLAS EST STANDARD 172 (A) INTRODUCING
THE STANDATD 172 (I) ELEMENTS OF STRICTNESS 172 (II) ELEMENTS OF
LENIENCY: THE NIEMUTZ IMPLICATION 173 (B) THE STANDARDS CONTENT AND
SCOPE 174 (I) LSTHEREA COLAS EST STANDARD? 174 (II) A BROADER MARGIN
OFAPPRECIATION 176 C LENIENCY AND THE COURT S WEIGHING OF COMPETING
INTERESTS: A SUGGESTED RATIONALE 177 1 AN APPROACH IN NEED OF
RATIONALIZATION 177 2 LOWERING THE APPLICANT S CONVENTION PROTECTION BY
TELEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION 180 (A) EMPHASIS UPON THE OBJECT AND PURPOSE
OF CONVENTION PROTECTION 180 (B) THE NEARER THE PROVISION S CORE, THE
NARROWER IS THE MARGIN OF APPRECIARION 181 (C) DOESDISASSOCIARIONWITH
THE CORE PURPOSE SUGGEST A WIDER MARGIN? 182 3 DEFERENCE TO DEMOCRATIC
PROCESSES IN THE ECONOMIC FIELD 184 (A) INTRODUCING THE COMPLEXITY AND
FLUCTUATION RATIONALE UNDER ARTIDE 10 185 (B) DEMOCRATIC LEGJTIMACY AND
THE NECESSITY CRITERION 186 (C) THE SPECIAL STATUS OFPROPERTY PROTECTION
UNDER THE CONVENTION 188 (D) THE SOCIAL FUNCTION OFPROPERTY 189 (I)
PROTOCOL 1 ARTIDE 1 AND PROPERTY PROTECTION 190 (II) A SYSTEMATICALLY
WIDE MARGIN IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ECONOMIC POLIDES 192 D SUMMARY
OBSERVATIONS 193 6 RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT 197 A RETROSPECT 197 1 THE
FRAMEWORK THAT SHAPES THE COURT S RESPONSE 197 2 THE COURT S RESPONSE
198 (A) THE COURT S RESPONSE IDENTIFIED 199 (B) JUSTIFYING THE COURTS
RESPONSE 200 B QUESTIONS OF WIDER SIGNIFICANCE 202 1
AMANY-SIDEDTELEOLOGY 202 2 ECONOMIC AND COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OFCIVIL AND
POLITICAL RIGHTS 204 3 A LIBERAL PROJECT 205 C WHITHER CORPORATE ECHR
PROTECTION? 206 BIBLIOGRAPH*/ 209 INDEX F 229
|
adam_txt |
This book studies the response of the European Court
of Human Rights, the international court that
supervises governmental compliance with the
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), to
complaints submitted to it by companies and their
shareholders. The protection of business
governmental regulation is hardly the main concern of
international human rights law, yet it is not disputed
that companies, and their owners, in principle enjoy
protection under the ECHR. Such complaints are not
unproblematic for the Court in Strasbourg, however.
This book analyses the Court's reasoning in three
groups of cases which have presented difficult issues
of treaty interpretation. As the case law is streamlined
in a minimalist fashion which obscures the Court's
rationale; this book construes the structural framework
within which the Court operates and explains how the
relevant case law is largely coherent when considered
against the general structure of ECHR protection.
This book is the first major study of the protection
of business enterprise under the ECHR and thus an
invaluable guide to understanding how the Court in
Strasbourg responds to corporate complaints. More
importantly, by focussing on a field of European
human rights law that is regarded by many as
marginal and even objectionable, the book reveals the
fundamental structures of European human rights
protection, where the protection of economic activity
and corporate life is regarded as inseparable from core
values of the ECHR such as an effective political
democracy and the rule of law.
Dr Marius
Faculty of Law of the University of Oslo.
THE HUMAN RIGHTS OFCOMPANIES EXPLORING THE STRUCTURE OFECHR PROTECTION
MARIUS EMBERLAND OXFORD UNIVBRSITY PRESS TABLE OFCONTENTS TABLE OFCASES
XVI TABLE OF LEGAL INSTRUMENTS XXIII LIST OFABBREVIATIONS XXV 1
INTRODUCTION 1 A OBJECT AND PURPOSE 1 1 THE COUPLING OF BUSINESS AND
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS 1 2 THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION AND
CORPORATE RIGHTS 2 3 EXPOSING THESTRUCTUREOFECHRPROTECTION 4 B OVERVIEW
6 C MATERIALS 8 D COMPANIES AND THE ECHR: AN OVERVIEW 10 1 THE COMPANY:
PROTAGONIST OF PRIVATE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE 10 2 COMPANIES AND THE ECHR:
BASIC FACTS 13 3 THE SYSTEM OF PRIVATE APPLICATION: OVERVIEW 14 (A)
THEADMISSIBILIRYSTAGE 14 (B) EXAMINATION ON THE MERKS 16 4 PROVIDING A
STRUCTURAL FRAMEWORK: PRELIMINARY ISSUES 17 (A) IHE REGULATOR/ STATE AND
THE NATUREOF ECHR OBLIGATIONS 17 (B) ECHRCOMPUEANCE 18 (C) THE COURT S
METHODOLOGY AND MODE OFREASONING 20 (I) THETELEOLOGICALAPPROACH 20 (II)
THE COURTS MINIMALIST REASONING 22 2 COMPANIES AND THE STRUCTUIE OF
CONVENTION PROTECTION 25 A AN OCCASIONAL SENSE OF CONTROVERSY 26 1
VBICES OF DISSENT: THE UNITED KNGDOMS ECHR DISCOURSE 26 (A) A CONCEPTUAL
MISMATCH? 27 (B) IDEOLOGICAL AND POLITICAL MOTIVES 28 (C)
DISPROPORTIONAL LMGIOUSADVANTAGES 29 (D) CONSIDERATIONS OF SYMMETRY AND
MERIT 31 2 THE ECHR'S SINGULAR HUMAN RIGHTS IDEOLOGY 32 B TREATY TEXT
AND DRAFTING HISTORY 32 1 THE TEXT READ IN ISOLATION 33 2 TACIT
ACCEPTANCE IN THE TRAVAUX PRTPARATOIM 35 XII TABLE OF CONTENTS C THE
CONVENTIONS VALUE SYSTEM 36 1 THE PREAMBLES SIGNIFICANCE 36 2 INDIVIDUAL
DIGNITY 37 3 DEMOCRACY 39 (A) DEMOCRACY'S IMPORTANCE 40 (B) THE
PRE-EMINENCE OFPOLITICAL DISCOURSE 41 (C) PRIVATE ENTERPRISE AND LIBERAL
DEMOCRACY 42 4 THERULEOFLAW 44 (A) THE CONVENTIONS RULE OFLAW PRINCIPLE
44 (B) THE RULE OFLAW AND COMPANIES 46 5 EUROPEAN LIBERALISM 47 (A)
EUROPEAN LIBERALISM AS CONVENTION VALUE 47 (B) LIBERALISM AND COMPANIES'
RIGHTS 48 (C) FREE ENTERPRISE AND EUROPEAN INTEGRATION 50 D
CONSIDERATION OF WHOSE INTERESTS? 51 1 WHAT KINDS OF RIGHTS AND
FREEDOMS? 51 (A) COLLECTIVE AND INDIVIDUAL ASPECTS OF CONVENTION RIGHTS
52 (B) ECONOMIC ASPECTS OFCIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS 54 2 OBJECTIVE AND
INSTRUMENTAL FUNCTIONS OF CONVENTION PROTECTION 57 (A)
THESUBJECTIVEAPPROACH 57 (B) THE OBJECTIVE APPROACH 58 3 PUBLIC
INTERESTS 60 (A) COMMUNITY INTERESTS 60 (B) SOVEREIGNTYCONCERNS 62 E A
MANY-SIDED CONVENTION 63 3 THE COURT'S APPROACH TO CORPORATE PERSONALITY
65 A THE'VICTIM' REQUIREMENT AND SHAREHOLDERS' CLAIMS 67 1 THE 'VICTIM'
REQUIREMENT 67 2 SHAREHOLDING AND ECHR PROTECTION 69 (A) PROTECTION OF
SHAREHOLDERS' RIGHTS 69 (I) SHARES AS PROPERTY 70 (II) SHAREHOLDER
RIGHTS 71 (B) PROTECTION OF SHAREHOLDER INTERESTS: IDENTIFICATION CLAIMS
73 (I) THE RIGHTS/INTERESTS DISTINCTION 73 (II) 'VEIL-PIERCING' ZA
STRASBOURG 74 B THE STARTING POINT: PRESERVATION OF CORPORATE
PERSONALITY 76 1 STARTING POINT: NO IDENTIFICATION 76 (A) THEAGROTACIM
CASE 76 (B) THE REACH OF AGROTEXIM 78 2 EXPLORING THE COURTS APPROACH:
DIE GIVEN JUSTIFICATIONS 80 (A) DUEFICULTIES IN DETERMINING WHO CAN
REPRESENT THE COMPANY IN STRASBOURG 80 (I) THEREASONMG 80 (II)
SUFFICIENDYCOHERENT? 81 TABLE OF CONTENTS XIII (B) UNREASONABLE
APPLICATION OF THE LOCAL REMEDIES RULE 83 (I) THEREASONING 83 (II)
SUFECIENDYCOHERENT? 84 (C) THE COMPARATIVE LEGAL CONTEXT 87 (I)
CONSTITUTIONAL SOLUTIONS 87 (II) THE BARCELONA TRACTTONCHAAEON 88 3 THE
AGROTEXIM APPROACH IN CONTEXT 89 (A) CONCERNFOR THE COMPANY'S
FUNDAMENTAL ATTRACTIVENESS 90 (B) STRUCTURAL ASPECTS OF CONVENTION
PROTECTION 92 (I) SUBSIDIARITY 92 (II) DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTATION 93 (III)
CONCERNFOR NATIONAL INTERESTS 93 C DISREGARD FOR THE CORPORATE VEIL IN
EXCEPTIONAJ CIRCUMSTANCES 95 1 THE'IMPOSSIBILITY'EXCEPTION 95 (A)
'IMPOSSIBILITY ASGROUND FOR ADMISSIBILITY 95 (B) THE 'IMPOSSIBILITY'
EXCEPTIONS RATIONALE 97 (I) NORISKOFCOMPETING CLAIMS 97 (II) THE COURT
ASCERTAINS ERRECTIVE PROTECTION OF CENTRAL CONVENTION VALUES 98 2
THE'VEHIDE APPROACH 99 (A) THEAPIPROACHOIPINCVAUCYVIRCLAND 99 (B)
EXPLAINING THE'\FEHICLE'APPROACH 101 (I) NORISKOFCOMPETING CLAIMS 101
(II) EFFECTIVE PROTECTION OF SHAREHOLDER INVESTMENT 102 3 APRAGMATIC
OVERALL ASSESSMENT 104 D CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS 108 4 THE COURT'S
RESPONSE TO HARD CASES OF APPLICABILITY 110 A HARD CASES OF
APPLICABILITY 110 B OBJECT AND PURPOSE AS ARGUMENTS AGAINST
APPLICABILITY 112 1 ARTICLE 8(1): BUSINESS PREMISES AS A COMPANYS 'HOME'
113 (A) A DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE PRIVATE SPHERE AND GENERAL PRIVATE
ACRIVKY 113 (B) ARTICLE 8 PRIMARILY PROTECTS THE NATURAL PERSON 114 (C)
ABSENCEOF'FIT'WITHPHILOSOPHICALJUSTIFICATIONS 116 2 ARTICLE 10(1):
(CORPORATE) COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION 117 (A) DEFINING'COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION
117 (B) THE RARIONALE FOR FREE EXPRESSION DOES NOT FIT 119 (I) THE
DEMOCRACY ARGUMENT 120 (UE) INDIVIDUAL SDF-FULFILMENT 121 (III) PURSUIT
OF TRUTH 122 3 ARTICLE 41: COMPANIES' COMPENSARION FOR NON-PECUNIARY
LOSS 122 (A) COGENTREASONSFORCONCERN? 122 (B) CONTESTED OPINIONS AND
PROBABLE CAUSES 124 (I)
DIFECULTIESMDETENNIRUNGMEMEANINGOFNON-RXAUIIARYLOSS 124 (II) RHETORICAL
MCOMPATIBILITY 126 XIV TABLE OF CONTENTS C THE COURT'S FAVOURABLE
RESPONSE 128 1 ARTICLE 10 AND CORPORATE COMMERCIAL EXPRESSION:
AUTRONICAGVSWITZERLAND 129 2 ARTIDE 41 AND MONETARY COMPENSATION FOR
NON-PECUNIARY LOSS: COMINGERSOUESA V PORTUGAL 130 3 ARTICLE 8 AND
CORPORATE 'HOME' PROTECTION: COLAS EST SA AND OTHERS V FRANCE 132 D
AREVAMPEDTELEOLOGY 134 1 RATIONALIZING THE COURT'S APPROACH 134 (A)
AVANT-GARDE ]WISPIADENCE 134 (B) AREVAMPEDTELEOLOGY 135 2 PRAGMATISM 137
3 SECURING OBJECTIVENESS 139 (A) EQUALTREATMENTOFLNDISTINGUISHABLE CASES
139 (B) RULE OFLAW 141 (C) COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS
PROTECTION 143 (I) COLLECTIVISM IN ARTIDE 41 143 (II) ARTIDE 8:
COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OF PRIVACY 144 (III) THE PUBLIC ASPECTOFFREE SPEECH
PROTECTION 145 4 PROGRESSIVENESS 147 (A) RELIANCE UPON PRIOR CASE LAW
147 (B) ANALOGOUS MATTERS ONLY 148 (I) ARTIDE 8 148 (II) ARTIDE 10 149
(III) ARTIDE 41 150 (C) PROGRESSIVE REASONING AS LEGITIMATING FACTOR 151
(D) A COMMENT ON THE DYNAMIC INTERPRETATION IN COLAS EST 152 E SUMMARY
OBSERVATIONS 153 5 LENIENT STANDAIDS OF REVIEW 155 A CONFLICTING
INTERESTS AND THE 'NECESSITY CRITERION 157 1 THE PUBLIC-PRIVAIE TENSION:
'NECESSITY' AND PROPORTIONALITY 158 (A) 'NECESSITY' 159 (B) THE
PROPORTIONALITY ASSESSMENT 160 2 THE SUPRANATIONAL DIMENSION: THE MARGIN
OFAPPRECIATION DOCTRINE 161 (A) THE MARGIN OFAPPRECIARION DOCTRINE 161
(B) ITS HOLE IN THE ASSESSMENT OF'NECESSITY' 162 B INTRODUCING THE TWO
STANDARDS OF REVIEW 163 1 ARTIDE 10(2): THE MARKT INTERN STANDARD 164
(A) INTRODUCING THE STANDARD 164 (B) THE ELEMENTS OFLENICNCY 165 (C) THE
MARKT INTERN APPROACH PREVAILS 167 (I) THE CURRENCYOF THE STANDARD 16"
(II) DOUBT AS TO WHETHER STATEMENTS ARE 'COMMERDAL' 170 TABLE OF
CONTENTS XV 2 ARTICLE 8(2): THE COLAS EST STANDARD 172 (A) INTRODUCING
THE STANDATD 172 (I) ELEMENTS OF STRICTNESS 172 (II) ELEMENTS OF
LENIENCY: THE NIEMUTZ IMPLICATION 173 (B) THE STANDARDS CONTENT AND
SCOPE 174 (I) LSTHEREA COLAS EST STANDARD? 174 (II) A BROADER MARGIN
OFAPPRECIATION 176 C LENIENCY AND THE COURT'S WEIGHING OF COMPETING
INTERESTS: A SUGGESTED RATIONALE 177 1 AN APPROACH IN NEED OF
RATIONALIZATION 177 2 LOWERING THE APPLICANT'S CONVENTION PROTECTION BY
TELEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION 180 (A) EMPHASIS UPON THE OBJECT AND PURPOSE
OF CONVENTION PROTECTION 180 (B) THE NEARER THE PROVISION'S CORE, THE
NARROWER IS THE MARGIN OF APPRECIARION 181 (C) DOESDISASSOCIARIONWITH
THE CORE PURPOSE SUGGEST A WIDER MARGIN? 182 3 DEFERENCE TO DEMOCRATIC
PROCESSES IN THE ECONOMIC FIELD 184 (A) INTRODUCING THE'COMPLEXITY AND
FLUCTUATION' RATIONALE UNDER ARTIDE 10 185 (B) DEMOCRATIC LEGJTIMACY AND
THE'NECESSITY CRITERION 186 (C) THE SPECIAL STATUS OFPROPERTY PROTECTION
UNDER THE CONVENTION 188 (D) THE SOCIAL FUNCTION OFPROPERTY 189 (I)
PROTOCOL 1 ARTIDE 1 AND PROPERTY PROTECTION 190 (II) A SYSTEMATICALLY
WIDE MARGIN IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ECONOMIC POLIDES 192 D SUMMARY
OBSERVATIONS 193 6 RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT 197 A RETROSPECT 197 1 THE
FRAMEWORK THAT SHAPES THE COURT'S RESPONSE 197 2 THE COURT'S RESPONSE
198 (A) THE COURT'S RESPONSE IDENTIFIED 199 (B) JUSTIFYING THE COURTS
RESPONSE 200 B QUESTIONS OF WIDER SIGNIFICANCE 202 1
AMANY-SIDEDTELEOLOGY 202 2 ECONOMIC AND COLLECTIVE ASPECTS OFCIVIL AND
POLITICAL RIGHTS 204 3 A LIBERAL PROJECT 205 C WHITHER CORPORATE ECHR
PROTECTION? 206 BIBLIOGRAPH*/ 209 INDEX F 229 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Emberland, Marius |
author_facet | Emberland, Marius |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Emberland, Marius |
author_variant | m e me |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)62133724 (DE-599)BVBBV021510695 |
dewey-full | 342.4085 346.24/066 346.24066 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 342 - Constitutional and administrative law 346 - Private law |
dewey-raw | 342.4085 346.24/066 346.24066 |
dewey-search | 342.4085 346.24/066 346.24066 |
dewey-sort | 3342.4085 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | 1. publ. |
format | Book |
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geographic_facet | Europa |
id | DE-604.BV021510695 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T14:18:43Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:37:27Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0199289832 9780199289837 |
language | English |
lccn | 2005030310 |
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oclc_num | 62133724 |
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physical | XXVIII, 239 S. |
publishDate | 2006 |
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publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Emberland, Marius Verfasser aut The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection Marius Emberland 1. publ. Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2006 XXVIII, 239 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cour européenne des droits de l'homme European Court of Human Rights Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) Convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales - (1950) Droits de l'homme (Droit international) - Europe Sociétés - Aspect moral - Europe Sociétés - Droit - Europe Ethik Menschenrecht Human rights Europe Corporation law Europe Corporations Moral and ethical aspects Europe Europa http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip062/2005030310.html Table of contents Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014727348&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext GBV Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014727348&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Emberland, Marius The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection Cour européenne des droits de l'homme European Court of Human Rights Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) Convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales - (1950) Droits de l'homme (Droit international) - Europe Sociétés - Aspect moral - Europe Sociétés - Droit - Europe Ethik Menschenrecht Human rights Europe Corporation law Europe Corporations Moral and ethical aspects Europe |
title | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection |
title_auth | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection |
title_exact_search | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection |
title_exact_search_txtP | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection |
title_full | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection Marius Emberland |
title_fullStr | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection Marius Emberland |
title_full_unstemmed | The human rights of companies exploring the structure of ECHR protection Marius Emberland |
title_short | The human rights of companies |
title_sort | the human rights of companies exploring the structure of echr protection |
title_sub | exploring the structure of ECHR protection |
topic | Cour européenne des droits de l'homme European Court of Human Rights Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) Convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales - (1950) Droits de l'homme (Droit international) - Europe Sociétés - Aspect moral - Europe Sociétés - Droit - Europe Ethik Menschenrecht Human rights Europe Corporation law Europe Corporations Moral and ethical aspects Europe |
topic_facet | Cour européenne des droits de l'homme European Court of Human Rights Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) Convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales - (1950) Droits de l'homme (Droit international) - Europe Sociétés - Aspect moral - Europe Sociétés - Droit - Europe Ethik Menschenrecht Human rights Europe Corporation law Europe Corporations Moral and ethical aspects Europe Europa |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip062/2005030310.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014727348&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014727348&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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