The European Court of Human Rights depends on the good faith cooperation of its members to implement judgement and maintain legitimacy, but how this translates into compliance varies both across and within states. This book presents an innovative framework for understanding how local cultures dynamically shape states' ideas about what is and is not legitimate in international human rights regimes.
The book investigates compliance as a product of cultural politics. Case studies from the United Kingdom, Germany and Croatia reveal how states rely on local understanding of human rights and law to deal not only with compliance 'sticking points' but also to evaluate the legitimacy of the European human rights system as a whole.
The book investigates compliance as a product of cultural politics. Case studies from the United Kingdom, Germany and Croatia reveal how states rely on local understanding of human rights and law to deal not only with compliance 'sticking points' but also to evaluate the legitimacy of the European human rights system as a whole.
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