Ein Plädoyer für die Änderung der Strafzumessungsgründe in § 46 Abs. 2 S. 2 StGB

Dass die von Justizminister Marco Buschmann angekündigte Ergänzung des Katalogs der in § 46 Abs. 2 S. 2 StGB aufgezählten Strafzumessungsgründe um die Merkmale der „geschlechtsspezifischen“ und „gegen die sexuelle Orientierung gerichteten“ Beweggründe auf verhaltene Reaktionen stößt, ist nicht verwunderlich. Die Reaktionen passen nur allzu gut zu der gesamtgesellschaftlich, medial und insbesondere innerhalb der Justiz zu beobachtenden Neigung, das Ausmaß und die Dimension geschlechtsspezifischer Gewalt in Deutschland nicht gänzlich anzuerkennen. In diesem Sinne ist der Vorstoß des Bundesjustizministeriums, mit der geplanten Gesetzesänderung geschlechtsspezifische Gewalt als solche zu benennen, ihre Bagatellisierung zu verhindern und damit ein Signal an die Gesellschaft zu senden, in höchstem Maße zu begrüßen.

Citizenship Imposition is the New Non-Discrimination Standard

Never before has the failure to naturalize been used by the Court against discriminated permanent residents, just as it would be unthinkable to greenlight the humiliation of Muslims by an Islamophobic government for failure to convert. The meaning of ‘discrimination’ in ECHR law has become less clear as a result of Savickis.

The Bill of Rights Bill and the damages of UK’s unilateralism

Just a fortnight before the resignation of Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the UK Government published its draft Bill of Rights Bill, which seeks to repeal and amend the 1998 Human Rights Act which incorporated the ECHR into UK law (section 1(1) of the Bill). The Bill is an expression of a broader trend emerging in UK policies to unilaterally amend (or even avoid) international law commitments.

Hanging by a Thread

On June 20, 2022, Israel’s PM Naftali Bennet announced that he has decided, together with Yair Lapid, Israel’s foreign minister and Alternate Prime Minister, to disperse the Knesset.  Bennet explained that the dissolvement was necessary to avoid “constitutional chaos”. But what was this pending “chaos”? What Bennet was referring to in such dramatic terms is the prospect of the expiration of the Emergency Regulations (Judea and Samaria—Adjudication of Offenses and Legal Assistance), which were set to expire as a result of the Knesset failing to pass a law extending them. What are these regulations? And how can the expiration of regulations, let alone emergency regulations, amount to a constitutional crisis?

When National Laws and Human Rights Standards Are at Odds

The UK Government’s agenda to erode human rights and to disentangle the UK from its European partners has now been fully materialised. Soon after Brexit, the UK Government announced its intention to replace the Human Rights Act, which incorporates the rights set out in the ECHR into domestic law, with a British Bill of Rights. The replacement draft Bill of Rights is now being considered by Parliament. Although the draft Bill confirms that the catalogue of rights remains the same, it introduces many significant changes. The draft Bill will water down, not strengthen, human rights protection in the UK.

The Selective Nature of a pan-European Willkommenskultur

Four months into Russia’s war on Ukraine, there has been a tremendous show of support for Ukrainians fleeing violence and the atrocities of war – in Europe and elsewhere in the world. As is well-known, European states have hammered out pragmatic administrative solutions to accommodate large numbers of incoming person, going to great lengths to provide for beneficial welfare arrangements. Against this backdrop, it may not be unreasonable to present the crisis in Ukraine as a tipping point for humanitarian protection more generally.

Transgender Women Athlete Exclusion in Disguise

A heated debate about the participation of transgender and non-binary people in female competitions is on-going worldwide. Just last month, the International Swimming Federation adopted a new policy which prevents transgender women from participating in its female top-competitions. Without any possibility for the affected group of transgender women athletes to participate in FINA’s top-competitions, the policy is disproportionate and discriminatory, and has the potential to violate other human and children’s rights.

The Costs of Outsourcing

Last month the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) granted an urgent interim measure according to Rule 39 of the Rules of the Court in a case concerning an imminent removal of an asylum-seeker from the UK to Rwanda. The UK's policy of outsourcing sets another dangerous precedence when it comes to restricting territorial asylum and the basic rights of asylum seekers. It is expensive, contrary to international human rights obligations, has significant adverse effects on those affected, scratches the state´s reputation, and increases existing tensions with the ECtHR.

Mehr soziale Gerechtigkeit im Strafrecht wagen

Seit erstem Juni werden auch in Berlin wieder Ersatzfreiheitsstrafen vollstreckt. Seit März 2020 war die Vollstreckung mehrfach ausgesetzt worden, weil man aufgrund der Coronapandemie den Strafvollzug schützen und nicht mit der häufigen Aufnahme von Personen mit kurzen Haftstrafen gefährden wollte. Damit wurde etwas umgesetzt, das viele kritische Beobachter*innnen des Strafvollzugs seit langem fordern: Das Ende der Vollstreckung von Ersatzfreiheitsstrafen.

The Ogiek Struggle for Recognition in Kenya

In a judgment handed down in Arusha on 23rd June 2022, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) affirmed its 2017 ruling that the Ogiek people are indigenous to the Mau Forest and that they are its ancestral owners, granting them a collective title to be achieved through delimitation, demarcation and registration of their land. The reasoning by the Court will have a significant bearing on the struggles of other indigenous peoples seeking to secure their land and livelihoods.