Brussels in Strasbourg: Theoretical Reflections on the Impact of European Union Law on the Case-Law of the European Court of Human Rights
Articles
Egidijus Kūris
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Published 2024-08-29
https://doi.org/10.15388/Teise.2024.131.1
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Keywords

collision rule
conflict of legal systems
Constitutional Court of the Republic of Lithuania
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
Court of Justice of the European Union
European Court of Human Rights
European Union law
fragmentation of international law
friendly interpretation
internalisation of international and EU law
preliminary ruling

How to Cite

Kūris, E. (2024) “Brussels in Strasbourg: Theoretical Reflections on the Impact of European Union Law on the Case-Law of the European Court of Human Rights”, Teisė, 131, pp. 8–22. doi:10.15388/Teise.2024.131.1.

Abstract

The article presents a theoretical reflection on one of the aspects of the impact of European Union law on the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights from the perspective of the competition between these two legal systems, and in the broader context of the perception of international law as a fragmentised legal reality. It is argued that the interplay between the law of the Convention and EU law is horizontal, as none of these legal systems is and perhaps will never be subordinated to the other. It is shown that one of the tools of harmonisation of the two legal systems is the so-called mutually friendly interpretation, and it is demonstrated how EU law-friendly (and, more broadly, international law-friendly) interpretation has been undertaken by the ECtHR in the cases of Al-Dulimi ([GC] 2016), Hanan ([GC] 2021) or Bosphorus ([GC] 2005). It is also discussed how the ECtHR’s approach to EU law as particular international law is reflected in the structure of the judgments of this Court.

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