Defending Human Rights
The author's work is based on the
assumption that in order to fully understand the issue of human rights, it is
necessary to think about the importance of human rights as a legal instrument.
It is therefore necessary to first defend the existence of human rights itself
and then to focus on defense based on human rights. For this reason, the author
is trying to show the source of human rights as the essence of legal order of
the Euro-American legal space. These sources are found with the help of
parallels between legal theory, evolutionary biology and cultural evolution. At
first glance it seems impossible to find any kind of connection between these
fields; however, at second glance, which is supported by the author's more than
sixteen years of work in advocacy and lifelong interest in natural sciences,
these connections are so obvious that it is impossible to miss them. The
submitted work is divided into two parts - a theoretical part, in which the
issues of human rights with parallels to natural sciences are discussed, and a
practical part providing some examples of defense of human rights based on
positive-legal regulations of human rights.
In the first chapters, the author refers to
instruments of cultural evolution that she describes as a process that replaced
or significantly supplemented biological evolution, which, at a certain point,
could no longer keep up with the fast evolution of the human race. The author
sees the law as a significant instrument of cultural evolution and a regulator
of behavior. The legal standard then as a mem (that is, a quickly spreading
piece of information) plays a similar role in evolution as a gene in biological
evolution.
The author
then talks about the necessity of cooperation between so-called natural and
social sciences, compares the reductionist and holistic way of approaching
reality and demonstrates these approaches on a legal background.
In the third
chapter, the author attempts to answer the questions when, from where, how and
why the law came into existence. She connects the creation of law and legal
standards with the creation of human civilization. This is also when the
written law came into existence. The author answers the questions about from
where and how with the help of the theory of mems. In her opinion, legal
standards are mems.
The fourth
chapter is based on a simple thesis: The higher number of people a certain
standard concerns, the more general the standard must be because it must
accommodate more opinions. The cardinal question remains, what is the
determinant of the content of a standard that is able to accommodate different
cultural environments.
The next
chapter is dedicated to the theory of games and concludes that the basic motive
of behavior of a human individual is to achieve mutual advantages. This thesis
is further developed in the sixth chapter that brands altruism as a
manifestation of human selfishness; however, this form of so-called selfishness
is in fact beneficial to everyone and is a stabilizing factor for entire
regulation and self-regulation of human behavior. The law as a regulator of
behavior is only a formulated rule that regulates competing interests of
subjects as entities gifted with natural human selfishness. In the seventh
chapter, the author returns to the theory of mems and their characteristics.
The eighth chapter connects the theory of fractals with the constant and
unavoidable expansion of legal standards and concludes that no legislative
expansion can fully cover all situations created by the life of human society
for systemic reasons. It is therefore necessary to go back to the essence of
the law that is expressed in the formulation of human rights and basic freedoms
- that is, in different registers of human rights.
The ninth
chapter is an introduction to the practical part describing situations in which
the author acted as an advocate in front of the European Court of Human Rights
(hereinafter the ECHR). The introduction to individual case studies explains
why the work talks only about the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms indicates the correlation between this Convention and
the Anglo-Saxon legal system. A list of cases defended by the author is then
followed by actual case studies.
The first type of case studies are
so-called "father" cases, where fathers are denied contact with their children.
These cases are described both chronologically and in respect to changes in the
attitude and ruling of the European Court of Human Rights. The first case is the
Přemysl Donát case that is described as a clear discrimination of the
petitioner - a father and physically handicapped person who is discriminated by
rulings of both Czech courts and the ECHR. Another described case is the Evžen
Voleský case that became the breaking point and the premise for all following
rulings of the ECHR regarding "father" cases. In this case, the ECHR ruled that
the right to a fair trial was violated, in particular as to the time limit
within which Czech courts ruled. Other described cases are the Václav Kříž case
and the Nenad Pedovič case. The last mentioned "father" case is the Luboš Patera case that was decided by the
European Court of Human Rights in March 2007. The mentioned case is interesting
in that both Radka Paterová, the wife of Mr. Patera, and L. Patera appealed to
the European Court of Human Rights. However, the ECHR ruled differently on both
cases, which the author sees as a clear setback for the case law of the
ECHR.
The case study part of the
work continues with a description of protection of the ownership right. The
right to own property is derived from the biological essence of man and his
need to materially secure himself and his offspring. The case of Hutten - Czapská
versus Poland regarding
regulated apartment rent is analyzed in detail. A similar case that owners of
rental apartment buildings are now filing at the European Court of Human Rights
is also outlined.
At the end,
the author discusses the importance of human rights, which she sees in the fact
that human rights protection cases test the functioning of the entire legal
system of the given jurisdiction. Protection of individual petitioners during
this testing is just a byproduct of the main role of the application of human
rights, i.e. feedback about the functioning or non-functioning of the system.
This entire system is based on a biological predestination of the behavior of
human society, from which instruments of cultural evolution stem. Even though
human rights lose their sovereign humanistic position in the work, they are
given a much more important and fundamental role - the role of a "watch dog" of
the entire system under which the Euro-American civilization functions.