cover image: ‘Might is Right?’ - The ‘Right to Protest’ in a new era of disruption and confrontation

‘Might is Right?’ - The ‘Right to Protest’ in a new era of disruption and confrontation

8 Sep 2024

A failure to prioritise the rights of ordinary members of the public – both in how the authorities fail to use the full range of the powers available to them under the existing legal regime; and in terms of the legal regime itself. [...] In balancing the rights of protestors and the there being no such explicit and unfettered right within the European rights of others, in each of the following situations do you think the police should Convention on Human Rights (ratified by the UK in 1951, the ECHR intervene to stop the protests, or not intervene to stop the protests?’ 10 | policyexchange.org.uk . [...] The Government should legislate to increase the protections afforded to Parliament and Parliamentarians by replicating the legislation in force in the Irish Republic under the Offences Against the State Act 1939 which forbids the “prevention by obstruction or intimidation of any branch of the government of the State from carrying out their functions, duties or powers”. [...] In balancing the rights of protestors and the rights of others, in each of the following situations do you think the police should intervene to stop the protests, or not intervene to stop the protests?” 42. [...] In considering the practical implementation of the law, this legislative framework must be read and understood in the context of the relevant rights found in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the applicable case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), and the domestic UK courts applying the Human Rights Act 1998.

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Pages
157
Published in
United Kingdom

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