Council of Europe

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    - Anything that is italicized needs to be rewritten The European Convention on Human Rights. Exactly what is it and what are its aims? Its an international treaty which only member States of the Council of Europe may sign. The Convention lays a basic groundwork of all rights and guarantees which the States have to be held to. These rights include the freedom of though, expression, conscience, religion, effective remedy, peace enjoyment of possessions, and the right to vote and to stand for election

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    Human Rights (ECHR) is an international treaty to protect human rights and fundamental freedoms in Europe drafted by the Council of Europe (CoE). The United Kingdom was one of the founding members of the CoE, which consists of 47 member states. Since 1953 UK has been bound by international law and committed to respect the rights established in the ECHR and has actively supported the Council of Europe and the ECHR. Until 1966 petitions by ordinary people to the ECHR against public authority in case

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    judgments are still valid for the European Union in its accepted form. The EU’s accepted controlling action is accepted as 'Ordinary Legislative Procedure’. This agency that the anon adopted European Parliament has to accept EU legislation calm with the Council. Before the Commission proposes new initiatives it assesses the abeyant economic, amusing and ecology after-effects that they may have. It does this by advancing 'Impact assessments ' which set out the advantages and disadvantages of accessible action

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    Simon Hix is a well-known academic, who researches the European Union and has written a variety of books on the European Union. He addresses how it functions and the problems that are associated with it. Some interests of his that he researches are, ‘European Union Politics and Policy, The EU legislative process and the European Parliament, Parties and elections and Rational choice theory’ (LSE, 2014). His primary aim when writing this book was to give readers an understanding of how the European

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    Simon Hix is a well-known academic, who researches the European Union and has written a variety of books on the European Union. He addresses how it functions and the problems that are associated with it. Some interests of his that he researches are, ‘European Union Politics and Policy, The EU legislative process and the European Parliament, Parties and elections and Rational choice theory’ (LSE, 2014). His primary aim when writing this book was to give readers an understanding of how the European

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    Since the end of the Second World War the leading countries in Europe try to build a sort of union to consolidate all Europeans countries together and avoid another conflict or a war. The union was evolving in time and it reached a point of the creation of the actual European Union in 1957 with only 6 countries – Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, West Germany, France and Luxembourg. Through the years European Union get bigger and bigger and today it have 28 official members even if there is Great Britain

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    However, the Common Law could be amended or overridden by Statute Law, EU LAW and/or Human Rights Law. Third is European union law. It was created as a result of European Communities Act 1972. There are four principal institutions, which are: The council of the EU, European Commission, European Parliament and European Court of Justice. They make the decisions concerning laws. Finally, there is European Convention on Human Rights. It came into effect in October 2000. It takes care about main provisions

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    period 2002-2011 estimated the number of victims of forced labor globally (NPR, 2013). The estimate also included forced sexual exploitation which was, 20.9 million at a global level, with an estimated 5.5 million children being trafficked (NPR, 2013). Europe had a human trafficking matter for decades, where it began with the trading of slaves. The 1400’s marked the start of the European slave trade in Africa when the Portuguese transported people from Africa to Portugal to use them as slaves (Timeline

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    United Kingdom gets constituted by four countries: the England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. There is no single arrangement of reports that contains the entire of the law of the UK. Moreover, UK law is likewise not classified, that brings a level of conviction to the law as it permits nationals to recognize plainly whether something is unlawful and the examination methodology that it will create. Absence of codification prompts the legitimate framework being firm as innovative improvements

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    The European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR) can be defined as an international agreement initiated within the Council of Europe, which was established in 1949 in Strasbourg in France in order to unify Europe after the Second World War (Harries et al., 2014; O 'Boyle, 2014). According to Donald et al., (2012), United Kingdom was among the first countries to adopt and has played an important role in ECHR creation at that time. In 1966, the petition and jurisdiction of UK’s citizens was voluntary

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