Evolutionary trends in the interpretation of the European Court of Human Rights under the European Convention on Human Rights
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Date
2021Author
Карвацька, Світлана Богданівна
Blikhar, Mariia
Huralenko, Nataliia
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The purpose of this Article is to analyse evolutionary trends in
the interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights
(ECHR) by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). To
achieve this goal, a wide range of general philosophical methods
were used. The Article submits that the ECHR has shown a growing
commitment to the evolutionary method of interpretation, using the
doctrine of a «living instrument», the ECHR, which is particularly important
for Member States with specific problems, although this method limits the
scope in the discretion of the State. It is concluded that the interpretative
methodology used by the ECHR involves the use of its methods, including
increasingly developing methods of consensus, efficiency, judicial activism,
comparison, innovative interpretation, autonomous method, and «balance»
method. This demonstrates, inter alia, the unlimited potential to improve
the ECHR’s interpretation of conventional standards. In the context of
modern transformations in the direction of proactive international justice,
judicial activism objectively departs from a formal application of legal
norms and reflects the ECHR’s desire to protect the fundamental human
rights of individuals and communicatethem.