Vladislava Stoyanova
Senior lecturer
Causation and Breach of Positive Obligations under the ECHR: Correcting the Past, Preventing the Future
Author
Editor
- Vladislava Stoyanova
- Mads Andenas
Summary, in English
The approach is guided by the idea that ascribing responsibility to the State for harmful outcomes is not that contentious. It is not perceived as contentious since the State has a functional role. The remedies envisioned by the ECHR responsibility system also pull the system away from the corrective justice rationale and, accordingly, away from stringency in the causation inquiry for the establishment of breach. In particular, even if breach of the positive obligation established (a conclusion facilitated by the flexible causation standard), States have discretion what remedies to choose. Concrete measures as measures to correct the past wrongful conduct (i.e. the wrongful omissions) are not ordered by the Court with the conclusion in the judgment of breach.
Department/s
- Department of Law
- Human Rights Law
- Migration Law
- Public International Law
- LU Profile Area: Human rights
- EU Law
Publishing year
2026
Language
English
Publication/Series
The Role of the Causal Inquiry under the European Convention on Human Rights
Document type
Book chapter
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Topic
- Law
Keywords
- Public international law
- Folkrätt
Conference name
The Role of the Causal Inquiry under the European Convention on Human Rights
Conference date
2025-06-05 - 2025-06-06
Conference place
Lund
Status
Inpress
Research group
- Human Rights Law
- Migration Law
- Public International Law
- EU Law