An excellent read and a much-needed contribution to the debate on whether the HRA should be repealed in favour of a proposed British Bill of Rights.

Rachael Ita, Times Higher Education

On Fantasy Island is an excellent read and a much-needed contribution to the debate on whether the [Human Rights Act] should be repealed in favour of a proposed British Bill of Rights.

Rachael Ita, Times Higher Education

Conor Gearty's forensically brilliant defence of the Human Rights Act routs the fallacies and fantasies of the Naysayers. His argument is for a nation - indeed a world where human decency prevails. Lucid, powerful, and advocacy at its finest. A triumph!

Baroness Helena Kennedy QC

Se alle

A lucid, forensic, somewhat irreverent exposition of what for many people is an arcane subject, but one that has done more than most of us realise to shape the society in which we live.

Chris Mullin, The Irish Times

In the 2015 UK General Election, the Conservative party pledged to reset the UK's relations with Europe, holding an in-out referendum on membership of the European Union and repealing the Human Rights Act, to be replaced with a UK Bill of Rights. With the decision now taken to leave the EU, the future of the Human Rights Act and the UK's relations to the European Convention on Human Rights remains uncertain. Conor Gearty, one of the country's leading experts on human rights, here dissects the myths and fantasies that drive English exceptionalism over Europe, and shape the case for repealing the Human Rights Act. He presents a passionate case for keeping the existing legal framework for protecting human rights and our relationship with the European Convention. Analysing the reform agenda from the perspective of British law, history, politics, and culture, he lays bare the misunderstandings of the human rights system that have driven the debate so far. Structured in three parts, the book first exposes the myths that drive the anti-Human Rights Act argument. Second, Gearty outlines how the Act operates in practice and what its impact really is on the ground. Third, he looks to the future and the kind of Britain we want to live in, and how, for all its modesty, the survival or otherwise of the Human Rights Act will play a pivotal part in that future.
Les mer
The repeal of the Human Rights Act is one of the major political questions of our day. In an engaging insight into the fantasies and myths driving the case for repeal, Conor Gearty defends the importance of the HRA and debunks the arguments that would see a UK Bill of Rights. An essential book for all readers who want to be informed on the debate.
Les mer
I. THE FANTASIES; II. THE FACTS; III. THE FUTURE
Carefully dissects the arguments for the repeal of the Human Rights ActChallenges the 'for' party by debunking the myths and fantasies that are the catalyst for a repealWill be the 'go to' book for information on both sides of the argumentExamines how human rights have played out in British history and cultureDiscusses the future of the debate and how the Human Right Act will determine the nature of the United Kingdom
Les mer
Carefully dissects the arguments for the repeal of the Human Rights ActChallenges the 'for' party by debunking the myths and fantasies that are the catalyst for a repealWill be the 'go to' book for information on both sides of the argumentExamines how human rights have played out in British history and cultureDiscusses the future of the debate and how the Human Right Act will determine the nature of the United Kingdom
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198787631
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Oxford University Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
220 mm
Bredde
147 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
258

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Conor Gearty is Professor of Human Rights Law and Director of the Institute of Public Affairs at LSE, having previously worked at Cambridge University and at King's College London. His books include Can Human Rights Survive? (2006) and Liberty and Security (2013) as well as Freedom under Thatcher (1990) and The Struggle for Civil Liberties (2000) (both with Keith Ewing), and Civil Liberties (2007). He is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Bencher of Middle Temple and has honorary degrees from Sacred Heart University, University College Dublin, Roehampton, and Brunel Universities.