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Human Dignity, Judicial Reasoning, and the Law: Comparative Perspectives on a Key Constitutional Concept

Edited by: Brett G. Scharffs, Andrea Pin, Dmytro Vovk

ISBN13: 9781032310572
To be Published: May 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00



This volume explores how national and international human rights courts interpret and apply human dignity. The book tracks the increasing deployment of the concept of human dignity within national and international courts in recent decades. It identifies how human-dignity-based arguments have expanded to cover larger sets of cases: from the right to life or to integrity or anti-discrimination, the concept has surfaced in disputes about political and social rights and rule of law requirements, such as equality or legal certainty. The core message of the book is that judges understand, interpret, and apply human dignity differently. An inflation in the judicial recourse to human dignity can saturate the legal environment, depriving the concepts as well as human-rights-based narratives of salience, and threaten the predictability of court decisions. The book will appeal to philosophers of law, constitutional theorists and lawyers, legal comparativists, and internal law specialists. Whilst being dedicated specifically to human dignity jurisprudence, the book touches on many aspects of judiciary and as such will also be of interest to researchers studying legal reasoning, interpretation and application of the law and courts, as well as social philosophers, political scientists, and sociologists of law, politics, and religion.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Human Dignity in Adjudication
Brett G. Scharffs, Andrea Pin and Dmytro Vovk.

Part I. The Social Meaning, Legal Salience, and Role in Adjudication of Human Dignity
2. The Rule of Law Sets Its Face Against Humiliation
Paul Gowder
3. Dignity—Continuation of a Dialogue
Neville G. Rochow and Hans-Joachim Cremer
4. Dignity Plus: Dignity Proper and Dignity Plus: On the Uses of Dignity in German Constitutional Jurisprudence
Justin Collings
5. Dignity, Sexuality, and Moral Order in Legal and Judicial Debate
Zachary R. Calo

Part II. Human Dignity: International and Comparative Perspectives
6. Supranational Dignity: The Court of Justice of the European Union’s Conceptualization of a Legal Value
Andrea Pin
7. A Multi-approach to Human Dignity in the European Court of Human Rights
Eugenia Relaño Pastor
8. Acknowledging Persons and Communities of Infinite Worth: The Concept of Dignity in the Jurisprudence of the South African Constitutional Court
Christine M. Venter
9. Human Dignity as a Constitutional Value: The Viewpoint of Polish Courts
Piotr Szymaniec

Part III. Human Dignity, Religion, and Courts
10. Deliberations on Dignity: Irish Case Law Concerning Medical Interventions and Freedom of Religion, Belief, and Conscience
Michelle Flynn
11. Religious Perspective of Human Dignity in Israeli Case Law
Haim Shapira
12. Human (Personal) Dignity as an Argumentation Tool of the Russian Constitutional Court
Mikhail Antonov

Part IV. Human Dignity and Social Rights Protection
13. The Judicial Use of Human Dignity in Social Rights Issues: A European Perspective
Giorgio Repetto
14. Dignity as a Shield: The Putative Dignitarian Discourse on Protecting Migrant Domestic Workers in Singapore
Eugene Kheng Boon Tan
15. Concluding Remarks
Brett G. Scharffs, Andrea Pin, and Dmytro Vovk