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31 N.Y.U. J. Int'l L. & Pol. 843 (1998-1999)
Margin of Appreciation, Consensus, and Universal Standards

handle is hein.journals/nyuilp31 and id is 851 raw text is: MARGIN OF APPRECIATION, CONSENSUS,
AND UNIVERSAL STANDARDS
EYAL BENvENIsI*
I. INTRODUCTION: MARGIN OF APPRECIATION
vs. UNrvERSAUSM
Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
(ECHR) and of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
(IACHR) and views of the Human Rights Committee (HRC)
resonate in numerous national decisions concerning human
rights issues. Their jurisprudence has become an indelible
source of inspiration for judges in national courts around the
globe.' Prominent among these international human rights
organs is the ECHR, whose jurisprudence enlightens not only
national judges but also judges and committee members of the
other international human rights-organs.2 Thejudicial output
of the ECHR and the other international bodies carries the
promise of setting universal standards for the protection and
promotion of human rights.
These universal aspirations are, to a large extent, compro-
mised by the doctrine of margin of appreciation. This doc-
trine, which permeates the jurisprudence of the ECHR,3 is
based on the notion that each society is entitled to certain lati-
tude in resolving the inherent conflicts between individual
rights and national interests or among different moral convic-
* Visiting Professor of Law, Harvard University; Professor of Law, The
Hebrew University ofJerusalem, Faculty of Law. I thank Kathryn Comerford
for her comments on a previous draft. Thanks are also due to the Israel
Science Foundation for a grant supporting the research on which this note is
based.
1. See Anne-Marie Slaughter, A Typology of Transjudidal Corninunications
29 U. RiCH. L REV. 99 (1994); Eyal Benvenisti, National Courts and the Interna-
tional Law on Minority Rights, 2 AusTRIuN REv. INT'L & EUR. L 1 (1997).
2. On the influence of the ECHR's jurisprudence on the IACHR and
the HRC, see J.G. MERis, THE D EvELOPhiaNT OF INTERNATIomi. L%%w BY
EUROPEAN COURT OF HUmAN RIGHTS 17-21 (1993).
3. For comprehensive analyses of the margin of appreciation doctrine,
see HowARD C. YouRow, THE MARGIN OF APPRECIATON DOCTRINE IN THE ID:
NAMICS OF EUROPEAN HuMN RIGHTS JURISPRUDENCE (1996); see also Eva
Brems, The Margin of Appreiation Doctrine in the Case-Law of the European Court
of Human Rights 56 ZA6RV (HEmELBERG J. INT'L L) 240 (1996).
843

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