11/16/2016
How the Human Rights Act works | Liberty
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How the Human Rights Act works The HRA provides that the human rights contained in the European Convention on Human Rights form part of UK law in three ways: 1) All UK law must be interpreted, so far as it is possible to do so, in a way that is compatible with HRA rights. 2) If an Act of Parliament breaches these rights, the courts can declare the legislation to be incompatible with rights. This does not a�ect the validity of the law – the HRA maintains parliamentary sovereignty as it remains up to Parliament to decide whether or not to amend the law. 3) It is unlawful for any public authority to act incompatibly with human rights (unless under a statutory duty to act in that way), and anyone whose rights have been violated can bring court proceedings against the public authority. It is clear from this that the HRA is not the same as, for example, the US Bill of Rights or the German Basic Law, which entrench rights and allow courts to strike down incompatible legislation. Instead, the HRA preserves the long-held doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty – as Parliament alone can decide whether or not to repeal or amend legislation. This is in stark contrast to the European Communities Act 1972, which allows UK law to be overridden if it con��icts with directly enforceable EU law. The HRA adopts a ‘dialogue model’ – where the courts have been invited by Parliament to indicate when legislation is incompatible with human rights but allows Parliament to decide if, and how, it will respond. In interpreting questions about human rights the courts must ‘take into account’ any decisions made by the European Court of Human Rights, but only to the extent that the Court considers them to be relevant. This does not bind UK courts – rather it requires the courts to take into account relevant judgments, much like they do under common law rules of statutory https://www.libertyhumanrights.org.uk/humanrights/whatarehumanrights/humanrightsact/howhumanrightsactworks
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