Balancing Human Rights? Methodological Problems with Weights, Scales and Proportions

Human Rights Quarterly, Volume 29, Number 1, February 2007

Posted: 9 Mar 2014

Date Written: 1 2, 2007

Abstract

This article takes issue with the argument that human rights are not absolute and should be balanced in relation to competing communal aims. The balancing of qualified human rights is a key practice of the European Court of Human Rights and a great deal depends on a clear analysis of the ramifications of balancing for our understanding of human rights aims. The author does not seek to propose an alternative to balancing, but aims to show that it is not necessarily coherent with human rights principles or the kinds of functions international human rights institutions are thought to perform.

Keywords: ECHR, balancing, proportionality

Suggested Citation

Çalı, Başak, Balancing Human Rights? Methodological Problems with Weights, Scales and Proportions (1 2, 2007). Human Rights Quarterly, Volume 29, Number 1, February 2007 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2406348

Başak Çalı (Contact Author)

Hertie School of Governance ( email )

Friedrichstraße 180
Berlin, 10117
Germany

HOME PAGE: http://https://www.hertie-school.org/en/who-we-are/profile/person/cali/

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