
Belief in justice : towards more inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights
(2015)
- Author
- Saïla Ouald Chaib (UGent)
- Promoter
- Eva Brems (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
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- ECHR (Strengthening the European Court of Human Rights: More Accountability through better legal reasoning)
- Abstract
- This dissertation examines which role the European Court of Human Rights could play in the context of increasing religious diversity in Western Europe, through a more inclusive application of the right to freedom of religion under the European Convention on Human Rights. It starts from a multi-layered view on inclusion which does not only focus on substantive inclusion, but also on inclusion at a procedural level. This study therefore offers a complementary normative perspective in addition to the traditional substantive critique on the Court’s freedom of religion case law building on the theory of procedural justice as developed within social psychology. The in depth scrutiny of the Court’s freedom of religion case law conducted in this dissertation reveals various procedural justice flaws. Accordingly several suggestions for improvement are advanced which are, as is argued, particularly important for the inclusion of minority religious groups.
- Keywords
- HRC
Downloads
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Belief in Justice-Saila Ouald Chaib 2015final.pdf
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-6869572
- MLA
- Ouald Chaib, Saïla. Belief in Justice : Towards More Inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights. Ghent University. Faculty of Law, 2015.
- APA
- Ouald Chaib, S. (2015). Belief in justice : towards more inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights. Ghent University. Faculty of Law, Ghent, Belgium.
- Chicago author-date
- Ouald Chaib, Saïla. 2015. “Belief in Justice : Towards More Inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights.” Ghent, Belgium: Ghent University. Faculty of Law.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Ouald Chaib, Saïla. 2015. “Belief in Justice : Towards More Inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights.” Ghent, Belgium: Ghent University. Faculty of Law.
- Vancouver
- 1.Ouald Chaib S. Belief in justice : towards more inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights. [Ghent, Belgium]: Ghent University. Faculty of Law; 2015.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Ouald Chaib, “Belief in justice : towards more inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights,” Ghent University. Faculty of Law, Ghent, Belgium, 2015.
@phdthesis{6869572, abstract = {{This dissertation examines which role the European Court of Human Rights could play in the context of increasing religious diversity in Western Europe, through a more inclusive application of the right to freedom of religion under the European Convention on Human Rights. It starts from a multi-layered view on inclusion which does not only focus on substantive inclusion, but also on inclusion at a procedural level. This study therefore offers a complementary normative perspective in addition to the traditional substantive critique on the Court’s freedom of religion case law building on the theory of procedural justice as developed within social psychology. The in depth scrutiny of the Court’s freedom of religion case law conducted in this dissertation reveals various procedural justice flaws. Accordingly several suggestions for improvement are advanced which are, as is argued, particularly important for the inclusion of minority religious groups.}}, author = {{Ouald Chaib, Saïla}}, keywords = {{HRC}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{300}}, publisher = {{Ghent University. Faculty of Law}}, school = {{Ghent University}}, title = {{Belief in justice : towards more inclusivity in and through the Freedom of Religion Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights}}, year = {{2015}}, }