In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9. / Küçüksu, Aysel.

Strasbourg Observers. 2021The Power of Rule 9.

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Küçüksu, A 2021, In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9. Strasbourg Observers. <https://strasbourgobservers.com/2021/03/03/in-the-aftermath-of-a-judgment-why-human-rights-organisations-should-harness-the-potential-of-rule-9/#more-5189>

APA

Küçüksu, A. (2021, mar. 3). In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9. Strasbourg Observers. https://strasbourgobservers.com/2021/03/03/in-the-aftermath-of-a-judgment-why-human-rights-organisations-should-harness-the-potential-of-rule-9/#more-5189

Vancouver

Küçüksu A. In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9. 2021.

Author

Küçüksu, Aysel. / In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9. 2021. Strasbourg Observers.

Bibtex

@misc{f38b97c4ad1d45ae927bfb7bd39c6244,
title = "In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9",
abstract = "NGOs and NHRIs – collectively referred to as human rights organisations (HROs) – have long enjoyed a certain celebrity for impactful litigation at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), but what do they do once the desired judgment has been handed down? Do they disperse or do they follow up, and if the latter, what does their follow-up look like? These and similar questions demarcate the largely uncharted territory that is HRO participation in the ECtHR execution process. As elusive as their responses might appear, the data to formulate them is all there, publicly available and easily accessible on the Court{\textquoteright}s HUDOC-EXEC website in the form of Rule 9 communications.",
author = "Aysel K{\"u}{\c c}{\"u}ksu",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "3",
language = "English",
publisher = "Strasbourg Observers",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - ICOMM

T1 - In the Aftermath of a Judgment: Why Human Rights Organisations Should Harness the Potential of Rule 9

AU - Küçüksu, Aysel

PY - 2021/3/3

Y1 - 2021/3/3

N2 - NGOs and NHRIs – collectively referred to as human rights organisations (HROs) – have long enjoyed a certain celebrity for impactful litigation at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), but what do they do once the desired judgment has been handed down? Do they disperse or do they follow up, and if the latter, what does their follow-up look like? These and similar questions demarcate the largely uncharted territory that is HRO participation in the ECtHR execution process. As elusive as their responses might appear, the data to formulate them is all there, publicly available and easily accessible on the Court’s HUDOC-EXEC website in the form of Rule 9 communications.

AB - NGOs and NHRIs – collectively referred to as human rights organisations (HROs) – have long enjoyed a certain celebrity for impactful litigation at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), but what do they do once the desired judgment has been handed down? Do they disperse or do they follow up, and if the latter, what does their follow-up look like? These and similar questions demarcate the largely uncharted territory that is HRO participation in the ECtHR execution process. As elusive as their responses might appear, the data to formulate them is all there, publicly available and easily accessible on the Court’s HUDOC-EXEC website in the form of Rule 9 communications.

M3 - Net publication - Internet publication

PB - Strasbourg Observers

ER -

ID: 258034937