International law scholars consider the ECtHR to be the most effective international human rights court in the world.
Implementation (4%) and
Russia (10%) and the highest Luxembourg, Monaco, and Estonia (100%) and Czechia (96%). (Belarus appears white here because it is excluded from the map: it is not a member state and does not implement rulings.)|262x262px The court lacks enforcement powers. Some states have ignored ECtHR verdicts and continued practices judged to be human rights violations. Although all damages must be paid to the applicant within the time frame specified by the court (usually three months) or else will accumulate interest, there is no formal deadline for any more complex compliance required by the judgement. However, by leaving a judgement unimplemented for a long period of time, brings into question the state's commitment to addressing human rights violations in a timely fashion. The number of non-implemented judgements rose from 2,624 in 2001 to 9,944 at the end of 2016, 48% of which had gone without implementation five years or more. In 2016, all but one of the 47 member countries of the Council of Europe had not implemented at least one ECtHR verdict in a timely fashion, although most non-implemented verdicts concern a few countries: Italy (2,219), Russia (1,540), Turkey (1,342), and Ukraine (1,172). More than 3,200 non-implemented judgements "concerned violations by security forces and poor detention conditions". Russia systematically ignores ECtHR verdicts, paying compensation in most cases but refusing to fix the problem, leading to a high number of repeat cases. Russian legislation has set up a specific fund for paying the claimants in successful ECtHR verdicts. • The
Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina was first ruled to be discriminatory in 2009 (
Sejdić and Finci v. Bosnia and Herzegovina), for preventing Bosnian citizens who were not of Bosniak, Croat, or Serb ethnicity from being elected to certain state offices. As of December 2019, the discriminatory provisions have yet to be repealed or amended, despite three subsequent cases confirming their incompatibility with the Convention. • In
Alekseyev v. Russia (2010), the ban on
Moscow Pride was judged to violate
freedom of assembly. In 2012, Russian courts banned the event for the next 100 years. •
Bayev and Others v. Russia (2017), relating to the
Russian gay propaganda law and related laws, which the court judged to abridge
freedom of speech. • Azerbaijani opposition politician
Ilgar Mammadov, whose imprisonment the ECtHR ruled illegal in 2014; he was not released until 2018. In the eight years between
Ivanov and
Burmych, Ukraine made no effort to resolve these cases, leading the ECtHR to "effectively [give] up on trying to incentivise Ukraine to comply with its judgments".
Caseload The caseload of the court expanded rapidly after the fall of the Soviet Union, growing from fewer than 8,400 cases filed in 1999 to 57,000 in 2009. Most of these cases concern nationals of the former
Eastern Bloc where there is less trust in the court system. In 2009, the court had a backlog of 120,000 cases which would have required 46 years to process at the previous rate, leading to reforms. According to the BBC, the court began "to be seen as a victim of its own success". Between 2007 and 2017, the number of cases dealt with each year was relatively constant (between 1,280 and 1,550); two-thirds of cases were repetitive and most concerned a few countries: Turkey (2,401), Russia (2,110), Romania (1,341), and Poland (1,272). Repetitive cases indicate a pattern of human rights violations in a given country. The 2010 Interlaken Declaration stated that the court would reduce its caseload by cutting back on the number of repetitive cases it dealt with. As a result of Protocol 14 reforms to reduce caseload, single judges were empowered to reject applications as inadmissible and a system of "pilot judgements" was created to handle repetitive cases without a formal finding for each one. Pending applications peaked at 151,600 in 2011 and were reduced to 59,800 by 2019. These reforms led to an increasing number of applications being declared inadmissible or bypassed a ruling under the new pilot procedure. According to Steven Greer, "large numbers of applications will not, in practice, be examined", and this situation is qualified as a "structural denial of justice for certain categories of meritorious applicants whose cases cannot be handled".
Access to justice may also be de facto impeded the lack of legal aid and other factors.
Impact ECtHR rulings have expanded the protection of human rights in every signatory country. Notable rights secured include: •
Article 2:
right to life including the abolition of
capital punishment, and effective investigation of deaths in custody and due to
domestic violence •
Article 3: freedom from
torture and ill-treatment, ending
police brutality and excessively poor conditions in prisons, banning
forced sterilisation •
Article 4: Article 4 cases have resulted in the criminalisation of
forced labour and
human trafficking in several countries •
Article 5:
liberty and security, such as ending excessive
pretrial detention that resulted in innocent people jailed for years •
Article 6:
right to a fair trial, including quashing
wrongful convictions, limiting the length of judicial proceedings to avoid unfair delays, and securing judicial impartiality •
Article 8: •
Right to privacy, which has included limits on wiretapping and
decriminalisation of homosexuality •
Right to family life, including ending child custody regimes which discriminated against men, LGBT people, and religious minorities •
Article 9:
freedom of conscience and
religion including
conscientious objection, right to
proselytise, undue burdens on exercise of religion, state interference in religious organisations •
Article 10:
freedom of expression protections, including quashing of
defamation laws that prohibited expressing unflattering opinions or imposed excessive penalties, protection for
whistleblowers and journalists who exposed political corruption or criticised the government •
Article 11:
freedom of association and
peaceful assembly, such as the right to organise
pride parades and political demonstrations • Article 14 and
Protocol 12: right to equal treatment, such as ruling against forms of
institutional racism against
Romani people • Protocol 1, Article 1:
property rights, including restoration of property illegally confiscated by the state and fair compensation for
expropriation ==Honours and awards==