Description

Book Synopsis

Can the EU be held legally responsible for its contributions to human rights harms in its Integrated Border Management policy? Or do systemic legal design flaws in the EU''s human rights responsibility regime give rise to a significant responsibility gap?

This book delves into these pressing questions, offering a transversal analysis of applicable legal frameworks under international and EU law. Divided into three parts, the book first analyses the international and EU human rights responsibility frameworks, revealing both normative incongruency' as well as liability incongruency'. Part two applies these frameworks to specific illustrations within the four tiers of the EU's Integrated Border Management, exposing the critical points where responsibility falters. Building on these findings and drawing from shared responsibility and relationality theories, part three briefly introduces ''Relational Human Rights Responsibility'' as an alternative method to ascertaining human rights responsibility of the EU specifically, and international organisations more generally.

The EUs Human Rights Responsibility Gap

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Joyce De Coninck

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      View other formats and editions of The EUs Human Rights Responsibility Gap by Joyce De Coninck

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 1/14/2024
      ISBN13: 9781509977352, 978-1509977352
      ISBN10: 150997735X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Can the EU be held legally responsible for its contributions to human rights harms in its Integrated Border Management policy? Or do systemic legal design flaws in the EU''s human rights responsibility regime give rise to a significant responsibility gap?

      This book delves into these pressing questions, offering a transversal analysis of applicable legal frameworks under international and EU law. Divided into three parts, the book first analyses the international and EU human rights responsibility frameworks, revealing both normative incongruency' as well as liability incongruency'. Part two applies these frameworks to specific illustrations within the four tiers of the EU's Integrated Border Management, exposing the critical points where responsibility falters. Building on these findings and drawing from shared responsibility and relationality theories, part three briefly introduces ''Relational Human Rights Responsibility'' as an alternative method to ascertaining human rights responsibility of the EU specifically, and international organisations more generally.

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