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2 produkter
2 produkter
Inbunden, Engelska, 2025
1 543 kr
Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar
The abundance of Roma rights cases before international and European courts reflects the Roma's systemic marginalization as well as their resolve to push the boundaries of human rights law. The Roma have increasingly raised concerns through strategic litigation, urging the courts to develop their jurisprudence and adjust the scope of human rights applications. This edited volume examines these cases, exploring the extent to which strategic litigation can and does push the boundaries of human rights.Adopting a long-needed yet untested approach, the volume situates Roma rights within the broader human rights edifice and identifies its key contributions. The volume focuses on the (quasi) jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, the Court of Justice of the EU, and the European Committee of Social Rights, with several chapters also drawing parallels with jurisdictions beyond Europe. Its contributing authors span a broad range of disciplines, including human rights law, political science, climate justice, and ethnology.Combining rich doctrinal and socio-legal analysis, The Rights of Roma in European Courts is an unparalleled resource for scholars and practitioners seeking to understand the systemic discrimination faced by the Roma and explore legal solutions for countering it.
Inbunden, Engelska, 2027
1 424 kr
Kommande
This book explores why and how ethnonational minorities - specifically Roma, Hungarians, and Muslims in Central and Southeastern Europe (CSEE) - engage in legal mobilisation.This groundbreaking volume examines the legal mobilisation of ethnonational minorities CSEE amid growing challenges to democracy and minority protection. While the region has experienced multiple waves of minority rights regimes - from post-World War I treaties to post-1989 European integration - suspicion toward minorities’ perceived “dual loyalties” has endured.Focusing on three key groups rooted in the former Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires - Hungarian minorities in states surrounding Hungary, the Roma across the region, and Muslims in the Balkans - the book explores how these communities harness the law to assert their rights under increasingly hostile conditions. Through detailed case studies of legal advocacy, grassroots legal activism, and strategic litigation, it illuminates the diverse ways minorities engage with national and transnational legal frameworks to secure recognition, resist discrimination, and shape political agendas.By comparing their strategies over time, the volume uncovers how legal action intersects with political and community mobilisation, showing how minorities adapt to shifting contexts; from the relatively open, EU-driven environment of the 1990s and 2000s to today’s more restrictive, illiberal regimes.Through its naunced analysis, this book will appeal to scholars and practitioners of minority rights, legal mobilisation, European politics, and socio-legal studies. It provides essential insights into how marginalised groups continue to fight for justice through law, even as the rule of law itself comes under threat.