Chao JING JING The Impact of National Security on Human Rights

The Impact of National Security on Human Rights

von Chao JING

A Comparative Study of Practice under the ECHR and in China

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Beschreibung

The book contemplates the relations between national security and human rights. It studies how national security and human rights interact with each other in Europe and China, and how each actor seeks to protect one without damaging the substance of the other. The book aims to offer an insight into the legitimacy of the assumption that China is partial to security while European nations opt for freedom.

By comparing the approaches taken by Europe and China, the book finds that both parties tend to allow the government authorities to take proactive actions against national security threats, even those threats may be potential, distant or cumulative. The substantive control, internal and external, concerns mainly the task of preventing the impugned power from being abused.

Nevertheless, divergences do exist. In terms of how countries deal with national security threats, it is not determined only by the nature of threats, but by the extent to which government authorities are sensitive to them. Divergences are also found in how the two parties unfold their approaches. It is noted that the approach taken by China is short of an effective arrangement against abuse of power by the government authorities. In this context, the book proposes the areas that China can work on without meeting resistance from its existing political system.

The book sheds new light on how to read the national security case law, which helps readers get hold of the main threads of the ECtHR’s decision-making patterns and categorise relevant case law. Scholars generally hold that the Court’s reasoning is short of clarity and consistency. The book proposes a way in which we can find the consistence and patterns that lie in the Court’s reasoning in national security case law.


The book contemplates the relations between national security and human rights. It studies how national security and human rights interact with each other in Europe and China, and how each actor seeks to protect one without damaging the substance of the other. The book aims to offer an insight into the legitimacy of the assumption that China is partial to security while European nations opt for freedom.

By comparing the approaches taken by Europe and China, the book finds that both parties tend to allow the government authorities to take proactive actions against national security threats, even those threats may be potential, distant or cumulative. The substantive control, internal and external, concerns mainly the task of preventing the impugned power from being abused.

Nevertheless, divergences do exist. In terms of how countries deal with national security threats, it is not determined only by the nature of threats, but by the extent to which government authorities are sensitive to them. Divergences are also found in how the two parties unfold their approaches. It is noted that the approach taken by China is short of an effective arrangement against abuse of power by the government authorities. In this context, the book proposes the areas that China can work on without meeting resistance from its existing political system.

The book sheds new light on how to read the national security case law, which helps readers get hold of the main threads of the ECtHR’s decision-making patterns and categorise relevant case law. Scholars generally hold that the Court’s reasoning is short of clarity and consistency. The book proposes a way in which we can find the consistence and patterns that lie in the Court’s reasoning in national security case law.

The intended readership includes scholars and researchers in the fields of human rights, legal studies, political science and Chinese studies, especially those whose research interests centre on

The book can also serve policy makers and human rights NGOs, by


Summarises the European Court of Human Rights decision-making models when reviewing national security case law Makes constructive suggestions on how to improve China’s approach on balancing national security and human rights Compares the similarities and differences between Europe's and China's approaches, as well as the reasons behind them

Autor*in

Chao JING

Themen in »The Impact of National Security on Human Rights«

national security human rights limitations European Convention on Human Rights European Court of Human Rights case-law human rights course of China national security law system of China balancing approach comparative legal studies civil and political rights

Stimmen zu »The Impact of National Security on Human Rights«

Details

ISBN: 9789819580484
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Erscheinung: 26.07.2026

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