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Timestamp: 2019-04-19 18:14:15+00:00

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This essay argues that the Human Rights Act 1998 has strengthened the protection of individual rights in the UK. However, it must also be recognized that the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty has in some instances lessened its impact. The essay has the following structure. Firstly, the provisions of the HRA 1998 are briefly set out. Secondly, we consider the use of the proportionality test and the declaration of incompatibility as evidence of the strengthening of protection of individual rights. We also refer to the complex question of the reach of the Act, which, if understood as horizontal can afford considerable protection to individual rights. Lastly this essay also argues that the doctrine of deference, rooted in the notion of parliamentary sovereignty, has weakened the impact of the HRA.
The HRA was conceived of as a way of establishing access to justice in British courts. With the traditional framework of statutory and common law principles regarded as providing inadequate protection for individual rights the HRA introduced the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into domestic law. Jack Straw emphasized that the goal of the HRA centred on ‘bringing rights home’. Individuals in the UK would be able to bring a human rights claim without having to face the expense and delay of taking a case to the European Court of Human Rights. The HRA provides that it is ‘unlawful’ for a public authority to act incompatibly with a Convention right and individuals are able to challenge such acts.
One of the key strengths of the HRA in protecting individual rights is its use of proportionality as a basis of review for executive action. Applying the ‘necessary in a democratic society’ test where an action is only deemed necessary if it meets a ‘pressing social need’ and is ‘proportionate’ is a more demanding form of scrutiny that the traditional approach used in domestic law which focuses on irrationality. Lord Steyn in Daly distinguished proportionality as a doctrine requiring assessment of ‘the balance which the decision maker has struck, not merely whether it is within the range of rational or reasonable decisions.’ It was also argued by Lord Bingham in Denbigh that the intensity of review resulting from the proportionality test would often be greater than under the irrationality test. Despite there being debate as to how intense the proportionality test should actually be (Doherty) the pattern set by Daly, Denbigh and Doherty is that executive action is now examined more rigorously under the HRA than before and as such affords individual rights greater protection.
S4 has positively impacted the protection of individual rights in the UK. For instance this can be seen with reference to Art. 5, the right to liberty and security of the person. The structure of the Convention allows States to derogate from Art 5 under particular circumstances outlined in Art. 15 such as a ‘time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation.’ Commentators have also pointed to the problem of ‘legislative creep’ which has led to the broadening of the definition of ‘very serious offences’ such as terrorism as shown by s1 of the Terrorism Act 2000. Having widened the number of people likely to meet the ‘terrorist test’ even a small increase in police powers of arrest and detention represented a threat to the right of individual liberty.
Two such increases took the form of indefinite detention without charge, trial or conviction under the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 and ‘control orders’ under the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005. A v Secretary of State for the Home Department brought s.23 of the 2001 Act before the House of Lords. S.23 allowed the Home Secretary to detain without charge any foreigner who the Home Secretary regarded as a terrorist the individual would not be deported to his home country. The government claimed the threat posed justified a derogation under Art. 15. However although the Lords accepted a ‘public emergency’ existed they held that s23 did not meet the extra requirement of Art. 15, that derogation was limited only to the ‘exigencies of the situation.’ S23 failed the proportionality test, could not be interpreted as compatible with convention rights because it was prima facie incompatible with Art 5 and so the Court issued a declaration of incompatibility.
A second declaration of incompatibility was made in JJ and others with reference to the control order regime enacted in the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005. The trial hinged on whether the restrictions imposed on JJ should be regarded as a deprivation of liberty within Art. 5. Sullivan J reasoned that it did and this was upheld in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords. The reaction of the government in both these cases is of considerable significance. Rather than choosing to proceed with s23 as it is legally entitled to do the government sought to replace it with control orders. When control orders amounting to 18 hours a day were construed as engaging Art. 5 the government changed it to twelve hours a day, in line with the House of Lords reasoning. The HRA, in providing for a declaration of incompatibility, enables the legitimacy of legislative power to be substantially undermined and as such provides protection for individual rights.
S 6 (1) of the HRA provides that it is ‘unlawful’ for a public authority to act incompatibly with a Convention right. To this extent then individuals are afforded protection from public bodies under the HRA but there is no explicit provision in the act that individuals and the private sector are required to abide by Convention rights. However, the actual reach of the HRA is a source of contention in judicial and academic circles. Not only have there been difficulties in giving meaning to the term ‘public authority.’(Poplar v Donoghue) There is also considerable debate as to whether the Act should only be read as vertically effective or also has horizontal effect. Whilst there is not space within the confines of this essay to do justice to the breadth of this debate it is arguable that case law supports the idea that the HRA has horizontal impact. (Douglas and Zeta-Jones v Hello! Ltd, Venables v Newsgroup Newspapers Ltd). The courts’ approach here was to see the HRA as providing a legislative incentive for the development of existing common law principles. In light of this the HRA can be seen as having the capacity to offer broad protection to individual rights in the both public and private sectors.
However, the impact of the HRA on individual rights is weakened is through a doctrine of ‘deference’. Construed from the idea that courts should be in a constitutionally subordinate position to Parliament it refers to deference from the courts to decisions made by elected bodies. The doctrine is a variation of the ‘margin of appreciation’ principle. In the jurisprudence of the ECrtHR the court’s task is supervisory and allows states a certain amount of autonomy in determining if a derogation from a Convention right is permissible.The principle expresses a limited notion of justiciability in both a substantive and transnational sense.
It can be argued that the concept of deference in domestic law goes further than the ‘margin of appreciation’ so that the scope of the ‘presumptive entitlement’ part of particular rights relies not just on judicial definition but also political. (R v Lambert, Ali and Jordan) In Alconbury and Kebilene a distinction was drawn between ‘basic rights’ and ‘allocation of resources’ issues. Broadly speaking this is the difference between political rights and socio-economic rights. The former is regarded as unsuitable for the doctrine of deference whilst the latter is a suitable issue for deference to the legislative viewpoint.
This essay has argued that the HRA 1998 has strengthened the protection of individual rights in the UK. The proportionality test, the declaration of incompatibility and even the reach of the act all lend themselves to this conclusion. However, it should be noted that the Act’s impact remains limited by the role of parliamentary sovereignty. The doctrine of deference creates a hierarchy in rights protection and individual rights are not entrenched in any legal sense. Alternative ideas of moral entrenchment seem rather inadequate in light of the current Conservative Party’s enthusiasm for repealing the Act.
House of Commons Second reading. Official report, 16 February 1998, vol 307 col 769.
A and others v Secretary of State for the Home Department , UKHL 56;  2 AC 68.
Poplar Housing and Regeneration Community Association v Donoghue  EWCA Civ 595,  4 All ER 604.
R v DPP ex p Kebilene  3 WLR 972 at 994.
Loveland, Ian, Constitutional Law, Administrative Law and Human Rights, UK 2009 p 672.
Loveland, Ian, Constitutional Law, Administrative Law and Human Rights, UK 2009 p 615.
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References: Art. 5
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 Art. 15
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 EWCA