Latest blog articles

  • Let us not forget about EU fundamental rights

    Human rights violations continue to be a major issue at the EU’s external borders and  pushbacks have been reported in several EU Member States. Most recently, the spotlight has been on Spain’s long-standing practice of pushbacks at the border of Melilla, as the ECtHR handed down its long-awaited...

    law_blog elin borjedal human rights
  • Looking beyond legal traditions towards practical effective legal assistance

    National laws or ‘legal traditions’ are not the main obstacle to realising the ideal of ‘effective legal assistance’ embedded in the EU procedural rights’ Directives. The resistance to realising this ideal originates mainly from the professional cultures of relevant actors, including criminal...

    Law_blog_Anna_Pivaty Criminal defence
  • On Interests and Values

    The development of human rights law is part of a fundamental shift in the nature and purpose of the international legal order. Where once international law was considered to regulate purely inter-state concerns, we now talk of the existence of international community interests and a shared...

    LBM_blog_Sarah
  • Forgotten and overlooked- children during their parent’s arrest

    ‘Police, open the door!’ A sentence often heard when police arrest people at their houses. These arrests are often carried out by heavily armed police teams and accompanied by noise, shouting and violence. In this often chaotic situation, one party is often forgotten: the child(ren) of the arrested...

    Children's rights - human rights blog by Peggy ter Vrught
  • To rescue human rights from management

    I wrote my PhD towards the last days of the debate over “social rights”. This debate harkens back to the fifties, when the International Covenant on Social and Cultural Rights was being negotiated. Some claimed that social rights could never be true rights. Others claimed that without social rights...

    Gustavo Arosamena blog human rights and social rights
  • Marital captivity and Human Rights

    Marital captivity, which describes a situation in which one or both spouses are not able to terminate a religious marriage and thereby is forced to remain married against her or his will, is an issue that has been receiving national and international attention.

    Marital Captivity blog Human Rights