Publication

Mar 2009

This essay narrates an exchange of communication between the Supreme Court of Canada and the European Court of Human Rights in relations to a central component of the domestic legal regime of dealing with non-citizens who allegedly pose a threat to national security. The author examines the legal practice of citing another state's jurisprudence or legislation by a national court. She shows that the commonly shared assumption that such comparative undertakings are accurate and systematic is questionable in the light of the observed legal practice.

Download English (PDF, 21 pages, 255 KB)
Author Audrey Macklin
Series CEPS Special Reports
Publisher Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
Copyright © 2009 Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser