The “Colonial Clause” and Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights: The European Convention on Human Rights Article 56 and its Relationship to Article 1
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25649Dato
2013-04-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Frostad, MagneSammendrag
Article 56 of the European Convention on Human Rights is often referred to as the «colonial clause» and it has received little attention by commentators, whereas there has been extensive writing on Article 1of the Convention
regarding the extraterritorial reach of that treaty. Article 56 has nevertheless
the effect of limiting the responsibility of Member States for acts and omissions
of the authorities of its dependent territories, although the Member State is still
responsible if it acts directly through its own metropolitan officials in such territories. By employing an example of Norway, this paper finds it unnecessary
for this country to undertake obligations pursuant to Article 56 in relation to
its dependent territories in and around Antarctica, since there is currently little activity there which is not already covered by the extraterritorial regime of
Article 1 of the Convention. The paper additionally considers the pros and cons
of extending the Convention to territories under Article 56 should future developments lead to a larger and more permanent population of these areas.
Beskrivelse
Forlag
Nordic Open Access Scholarly PublishingSitering
Frostad M. The “Colonial Clause” and Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights: The European Convention on Human Rights Article 56 and its Relationship to Article 1. Arctic Review on Law and Politics. 2013(1):21-42Metadata
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Copyright 2013 The Author(s)