This section contains a selection of 12 assignment
topics and ideas on human rights and Immigration HR. Please feel free to use
these topics to help you create your own HR assignment topic.
1. An Examination of
the Pubic right to Protest and the Rights of the Police under PACE 1984:
The freedom of assembly (Article 11 of the ECHR) is
protected in the UK by virtue of s. 3 of the HRA 1998. The common HR has
traditionally given a broad right for peaceful protest (DPP v Jones (Margaret)
[1999] 2 AC 240; R (Laporte) v Chief Constable of Gloucestershire [2007] 2 AC
205). This is supported under PACE Code of Practice A, with regards to
reasonable suspicion; albeit s. 30 of the Anti-Social Behaviour Act provides a
broad right (R (Pritpal Singh v Chief Constable of West Midlands [2007] 2 All
ER 297).Thus, the provisions of this Act will be examined to identify if it
gives too much power to disperse public protests.
2. Is the broad
leeway given to detention and treatment of the mentally ill fit for purpose?
The case of Hutchinson Reid v UK 50272/99 (2003)
ECHR 94 heldit is legitimate to hold a mentally ill person who poses a threat
(to themselves or the public) in hospital detention. This is even the case if
the condition is not treatable. The rationale used is that there is legitimacy
of preventative detention on safety grounds. A similar argument of “best
interest” is applied to when consent for medical treatment can be dispensed
with. Thus, the following examination will explore the human rights rationale
that is applied to erode the integrity of freedom and choice for mentally ill
persons.
3. Should Prisoners
be given the right to vote? An examination of whether the jurisprudence of the
European Court of Human Rights provides a wider right to democracy:
This assignment topic will explore the debate over
the application of Article 3 of Protocol 1 of the ECHR (European Convention on
Human Rights) that has provided a more balanced approach to the prisoner's
right to vote (Greens and MT v UK (Applications nos. 60041/08 and 60054/08).
The Greens Case is an example of the prima facie inherency of the human rights,
which meant that the blanket ban of the prisoner's right to vote is
illegitimate and disproportionate. Thus, this examination will explore whether
the debate over the prisoner's right to vote should force a change of stance by
the UK government.
4. Is there a
positive right of authorities to protect? An examination of domestic violence
and the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights:
The duty of states in complex and private domestic
violence cases is problematic, because there is a traditional ethos of
acceptance. This culture of acceptance, as well as the public-private dichotomy
has created a culture of non-reporting amongst victims of domestic violence.
This is due to the lack of trust amongst these victims for the crimes, which
then creates a vicious circle. This is because there are “public policy”
limitations for prosecution of crimes, i.e. the most pressing crimes will be
prosecuted as a priority. Thus, if reporting of domestic violence crimes are
low then the priority of these crimes will be treated as less important. The
case of Opuz v Turkey (2009) App. No. 33401/02, Eur. Ct. H.R identified there
is a positive duty on states to protect once there is knowledge of domestic
violence. Thus, This assignment topic will explore if the UK is meeting this
obligation.
5. Should the UN
intervene into to oppressive regimes? A comparative examination of the legal
and human rights justifications for intervening in Afghanistan and Libya and
the inaction in Syria:
This assignment topic will explore when humanitarian
intervention is a legal requirement for the UN through an examination of the
resolutions from the 1990s. It will then consider if the grounds in the case of
Afghanistan and Libya can be justified and be distinguished from the case of
Syria. Thus, this discussion will identify if there is a growing body
international HRs for allowable intervention; as opposed to a political power
struggle of the Security Council.
6. Should the Death
Penalty be reinstated in English HR? A Human Rights Treatise Against Arguments
supporting the Death Penalty?
This assignment topic will examine the legal
theories for and against the death penalty. This will be followed by an
exploration of international humanitarian HR on the legitimacy of the Death
Penalty. It will then consider the European Court of Human Rights' approach to
the death penalty to understand the European stance. Finally, it will consider
the different approached to the death penalty in the US, in order to determine
if it should be reinstated in the UK.
7. Should the Rights
of the Child be fully recognised in the European Convention on Human Rights?
The Interface between the European Court of Human Rights “best interests”
principle and the inherent rights of the child:
This assignment topic will examine the theories on
the rights of the child and international humanitarian norms (i.e. the
Convention on the Rights of the Child). This will then be juxtaposed with the
“best interests” arguments of the European Court of Human Rights and English HR.
Thus, it will propose that the “best interests” argument is harming the
fundamental integrity of the child. On this basis, this discussion will bring
together the theories on the rights of the child and the HR, in order to prove
or disprove this argument.
8. Should the Right
to a Family and Private Life be restricted in the case of Failed Asylum
Seekers?
This assignment topic will explore the evolution of
European Court of Human Rights' case HR on the right of a private life and family
life for failed asylum seekers (Boultif v Switzerland [2001] ECHR 54273/00;
Uner v Netherlands [2006] ECHR 465 10/99). This approach will be compared with
the approach of the UK Courts and Immigration Tribunals to determine if the
standard of the ECHR is being met. Thus, it will identify if Razgar
Exceptionality (R (Razgar) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004]
UKHL 27 is still valid case HR in the light of Huang and Kashmiri v SSHD [2007]
UKHL 11 and Beoku-Betts v SSHD [2008] UKHL 39.
9. Is the HR of
Rendition and Extradition under English HR sufficiently protecting human rights
obligations?
This assignment topic is going to focus on the
juxtaposition of preventative detention and extradition (rendition). In order
to explore this subject the core objective is to examine the nature of rights
purported by the Government and the ECtHR to understand to different
viewpoints. This means a purely comparative approach will be developed to
undertake this discussion, because it will begin by placing the foundations and
rationales of the approaches taken by the two different legal systems. Thus,
the basis of this discussion is to examine the validity of the UK government's
argument that those, who pose a threat to the state, put their rights “on hold”
and can be extradited. This discussion will explore a number of high profile
cases of extradition to the USA; as well as the Abu Hamza Case.
10. Is the 1951
Geneva Convention for Refugees fit for purpose?
This assignment topic will explore if the 1951
Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (the Refugee Convention)
is fit for purpose. It will examine if the model is overly narrow, which s
identifiable by the broader application of protections under international,
regional and national human rights HR (e.g. The UN Convention Against Torture
and the European Convention on Human Rights).There are also countries, such as
Canada, that have a broader application of protection. Thus, the following
examination will explore these models against the Refugee Convention to
determine if it needs to be replaced or reformed.
11. To what extent
has Fortress Europe created an immigration model that is closed to non-EU
Citizens?
The EU migration policy to irregular migrants has
become exclusionary if they are a non-EU Citizen. This has resulted in a narrow
application of the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
(the Refugee Convention). The application of the Refugee Convention and non-EU
migrants is further clarified in the Qualification Directive. The accumulation
of these measures indicates the concept of Fortress Europe is in place.
However, the concept of an EU citizen is significantly broad, which has
resulted in third-country nationals being extended these rights (Ruiz Zambrano
[2011]2 CMLR); albeit limitations will be applied whenever possible (McCarthy
[2011] 3 CMLR 10). Thus, this discussion will examine the nature of Fortress
Europe and the impact on migration of non-EU Citizens.
12. Can the Points
System really enable a “cap” to be created in the English Immigration Model?
This assignment topic will explore the legal
framework of the points system, in order to determine if it is capable of
creating a “cap”. This discussion will examine a number of issues from the
application of the points system; as well as a limitation imposed by the Free
Movement of Workers and the rights of EU Nationals. Thus, this comprehensive
review will explore if a cap is a legal possibility or a political myth in the
UK.
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