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12 Denning L.J. 1 (1997)

handle is hein.journals/denlj12 and id is 1 raw text is: BRINGING HOME THE EUROPEAN
CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
The Rt.Hon. The Lord Woolf*
Early in its administration, the Government confirmed that Section 1 of the
European Convention on Human Rights (Articles 2 to 12 and 14 to 18 and
Protocol No 1 (Articles 1 to 3)) would be incorporated into domestic legislation.
The Human Rights Bill, which will incorporate the Convention, is currently
progressing through Parliament. This Bill will ensure that our courts apply the
Convention rights in a way which reflects case law of the European Court of
Human Rights at Strasbourg, enabling individuals to have access to rights here
that at present they have to seek through the lengthy and expensive process of
going to Strasbourg. The Convention rights will be available against public
bodies only, and not against private bodies or individuals. The Human Rights
Bill will bring the Convention home.
Experience in other parts of the Commonwealth suggests that incorporation of
the Convention will change dramatically the landscape of the legal scene in
Britain. It is true that, over the last ten years or so, some of the principles the
Convention encapsulates have been entering our !aw by a process of osmosis.
Many of the concepts enshrined in the Convention have therefore been given
effect. Although we were not previously aware of it, all along these principles
have been part of the common law! They were, so to speak, not foreign intruders
but English princesses sleeping peacefully, waiting for the kiss of a judicial
prince to bring them in turn to life when deciding a case.
However, the gradual process that has been taking place bears no relation to
the impact which will result from making the Convention part of the law of this
country. Incorporation will produce change on a scale which is perhaps without
precedent. It will require the judiciary to adjust to a new situation. Even our
becoming members of the European Community provides no true precedent.
Lord Denning, my predecessor as Master of the Rolls and whose distinguished
name this journal bears, described in a prophetic judgment the incoming tide
* The Master of the Rolls.

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