header-logo header-logo

Human Rights Act: Aspirations, enforcement & remedies

03 October 2025 / Alistair Mills
Issue: 8133 / Categories: Features , Human rights , EU , Constitutional law , Judicial review
printer mail-detail
231391
Twenty five years after coming into force, the Human Rights Act has embedded itself in UK law, strengthening rights without unsettling the constitution, writes Alistair Mills

  • Considers the methods used in the Human Rights Act 1998 to secure the protection of rights.
  • Notes that the Act largely uses existing and recognised legal techniques, easing the adoption of human rights standards.

In the run-up to the passing of the Human Rights Act 1998, some saw a codified set of rights as something foreign to the common law method—and all the more foreign when it came from an instrument entitled the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). On this conception, the Act acted like an organ transplant, importing something from the outside into domestic law.

There are reasons to doubt the appropriateness of this metaphor. There were important ways in which the ECHR reflected the principles of the common law, and was therefore not foreign to the UK’s legal system. Further, technically, the Human Rights

To access this full article please fill the form below.
All fields are mandatory unless marked as 'Optional'.
If you already a subscriber to New Law Journal, please login here

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Thomson Hayton Winkley—Suzie Fisher

Thomson Hayton Winkley—Suzie Fisher

Cumbria firm appoints long-serving lawyer as new managing director

Taylor Wessing—Kim Wedral

Taylor Wessing—Kim Wedral

Employment specialist joins Cambridge office as partner

Mewburn Ellis—Amy Crouch

Mewburn Ellis—Amy Crouch

Patent litigation offering boosted by partner appointment

NEWS
The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) has published a statement in a bid to clear up confusion over the right to conduct litigation following Mazur and another v Charles Russell Speechleys
Home-buyers could be given an option to sign a binding contract with vendors to protect against the practice of parties pulling out of agreements after months of negotiations, under a proposed overhaul of conveyancing laws
A future Conservative government would abolish the Sentencing Council and Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) and sack judges who defended migrants’ rights, shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick has said
UK law firms have risen up an annual index of responsible business activity, while US firms have regressed amid President Trump’s diversity and equality crackdown
The right of the press to report on the criminal courts received a boost this week, following an update to the Criminal Procedure Rules
back-to-top-scroll