• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Execution European Court of Human Rights Decisions: International & Constitutional Aspects

Student: Sikora Yaroslav

Supervisor:

Faculty: School of Law

Educational Programme: Law and Public Administration (Master)

Year of Graduation: 2020

Graduate qualification work on «Execution European Court of Human Rights Decisions: international and constitutional Aspects». Author: Sikora Yaroslav Olegovich, 2nd year master's degree at the Law Faculty of the St. Petersburg branch of the National Research University "Higher School of Economics", MPR181 group. The graduate qualification work consists of an introduction, three chapters, two sub-sections, a conclusion and a list of materials used. The introduction reveals the relevance of the chosen topic and describes the purpose and objectives of the graduate qualification paper. The first chapter outlines the conflict aspects of the status of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, taking into account the provisions of international instruments. The second chapter is devoted to determining the place of international law norms in the national legal order of a number of European countries, followed by revealing trends in their interaction with judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. The third chapter is aimed at analysing the constitutional regulation of the execution of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, as well as at reviewing the main positions of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation on this issue. In the first subsection of the third chapter the analysis of the positions of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation devoted to the execution of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights is carried out. In the second subsection of the third chapter, the current trends in the enforcement of judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in the Russian Federation are considered. The conclusion summarizes the work done and formulates conclusions on the lawfulness of the derogation of States Parties to international communication from legal positions reflected in the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. The final qualification work contains 43 pages and 54 sources have been used to write it.

Student Theses at HSE must be completed in accordance with the University Rules and regulations specified by each educational programme.

Summaries of all theses must be published and made freely available on the HSE website.

The full text of a thesis can be published in open access on the HSE website only if the authoring student (copyright holder) agrees, or, if the thesis was written by a team of students, if all the co-authors (copyright holders) agree. After a thesis is published on the HSE website, it obtains the status of an online publication.

Student theses are objects of copyright and their use is subject to limitations in accordance with the Russian Federation’s law on intellectual property.

In the event that a thesis is quoted or otherwise used, reference to the author’s name and the source of quotation is required.

Search all student theses