Shortlisted for The Peter Birks Prizes for Outstanding Legal Scholarship 2011
The Evolution of the European Convention on Human Rights
From Its Inception to the Creation of a Permanent Court of Human Rights
Ed Bates
Reviews and Awards
"Bates has written a lucid, readable book on the development of the European Court of Human Rights, from the kernel of the Convention, written in 1948 as an safeguard against totalitarianism, to its development as a European Bill of Rights, with the court as a constitutional court for Europe delivering landmark jurisprudence at significant points in its development." - David J Dickson, The Journal of the Law Society of Scotland
"Bates picks up the mantle of these earlier important works and his magisterial study is a worthy successor to them." - Urfan Khaliq (Cardiff University), Journal of Law and Society
"This monograph will assist generations of legal practitioners and academics in their quest for arguments supporting particular interpretations of the Convention given that open-ended norms of the Convention provide opportunities for legal creativity and judicial activism." - Kanstantsin Dzehtsiarou, Human Rights Law Review 13:1