The Conservative Human Rights Revolution: European Identity, Transnational Politics, and the Origins of the European Convention

Capa
Oxford University Press, 2017 - 507 páginas
The European Court of Human Rights has long held unparalleled sway over questions of human rights violations across continental Europe, Britain, and beyond. Both its supporters and detractors accept the common view that the European human rights system was originally devised as a means of containing communism and fascism after World War II.

In The Conservative Human Rights Revolution, Marco Duranti radically reinterprets the origins of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), arguing that conservatives conceived of the treaty not only as a Cold War measure, but also as a vehicle for pursuing a controversial domestic political agenda on either side of the Channel. Just as the Supreme Court of the United States had sought to overturn Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, a European Court of Human Rights was meant to constrain the ability of democratically elected governments to implement left-wing policies that British and French conservatives believed violated their basic liberties.

Conservative human rights rhetoric, Duranti argues, evoked a romantic Christian vision of Europe. Rather than follow the model of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, conservatives such as Winston Churchill grounded their appeals for new human rights safeguards in the values of a bygone European civilization. All told, these efforts served as a basis for reconciliation between Germans and the "West," the exclusion of communists from the European project, and the denial of equal protection to colonized peoples.

Illuminating the history of internationalism and international law, and elucidating Churchill's Europeanism and critical contribution to the genesis of the ECHR, this book revisits the ethical foundations of European integration across the first half of the twentieth century and offers a new perspective on the crisis in which the European Union finds itself today.

 

Conteúdo

Introduction
1
1 The Romance of International Law
13
2 Internationalism Between Nostalgia and Technocracy
49
3 Churchill Human Rights and the European Project
96
4 Postwar Reconciliation Colonialism and Cold War Human Rights
164
5 Neoliberal Human Rights in Postwar Britain
215
6 Neomedieval Human Rights in the Shadow of Vichy
255
7 Catholic Human Rights in Postwar France
290
9 The Ethical Foundations of European Integration
345
10 Human Rights and Conservative Politics
361
11 Revolution and Restoration in the History of Human Rights
385
Conclusion
402
A European Union Without Qualities
405
Notes
411
Archival Collections
483
Index
485

8 Rethinking the ECHRs Original Intent
321

Outras edições - Ver todos

Termos e frases comuns

Sobre o autor (2017)

Marco Duranti is a lecturer in Modern European and International History at the University of Sydney.

Informações bibliográficas