ISBN-13: 9789041112453 / Angielski / Twarda / 1999 / 448 str.
ISBN-13: 9789041112453 / Angielski / Twarda / 1999 / 448 str.
The first application to the European Commission of Human Rights was received in 1955. In over forty years, the Commission has registered more than 40 000 applications. Its published decisions run to around 150 volumes - 46 in the Collection of decisions (1960 to 1974) and nearly 100 in Decisions and reports (1975 onwards). From this mass of case-law, the authors have distilled the essential elements to produce a one-volume guide to the jurisprudence of the Convention and its protocols. In an article-by-article approach focused on the Court's case-law, they present key, passages from the judgments relevant to each article, putting them in context with their own commentary. The arrangement by article, the extensive extracts from the case-law, the detailed table of contents, and the index give the reader different ways of approaching the book, making it a useful tool for both the newcomer to Convention law and the more experienced researcher. La premiere requete transmise a la Commission europeenne des Droits de l'Homme date de 1955. En quelque quarante ans, la Commission en a enregistre plus de 40 000. La publication de ses decisions represente environ 150 volumes: 46 Recueils des decisions, couvrant les annees 1960 a 1974, et, par la suite, pres de 100 volumes de Decisions et rapports. Les auteurs du present ouvrage ont extrait l'essentiel de cette vaste jurisprudence et l'ont rassemb1e en un volume unique, presentant, pour chaque article de la Convention, les passages cles d'arrets de la Cour et de certaines decisions de la Commission, assortis de leurs commentaires. La presentation par article de la Convention, les amples extraits de la jurisprudence, la table des matieres detaillee et l'index donnent au lecteur differentes voies d'acces a cet ouvrage, outil indispensable tant pour le neophyte que pour le specialiste plus experimente de la Convention.