The Chilling Effect of Turkey’s Article 301 Insult Law

Authors
Publication date 2019
Journal European Human Rights Law Review
Volume | Issue number 24 | 3
Pages (from-to) 298-308
Number of pages 11
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Institute for Information Law (IViR)
Abstract
This article discusses how the approach of the European Court of Human Rights has evolved in seeking to protect freedom of expression from the chilling effect of Turkey’s controversial Article 301 insult law. The article reveals the early reluctance within the Court in finding that the law’s provisions were incompatible with freedom of expression, and yet, the analysis now demonstrates how the Court’s concern for the chilling effect has led the Court to two adopt notable approaches: first, the Court permitting applicants to argue that the law, in and of itself, violates the European Convention on Human Rights, even where an applicant has not been convicted, nor even prosecuted under the law; and second, the Court’s application of its rarely-used competence under Article 46 of the European Convention, finding that amending Article 301 would “constitute an appropriate form of execution” of the Court’s judgment.
Document type Article
Note With regard to cases: Dink v Turkey (2668/07) Unreported September 14, 2010 (ECHR); Altug Taner Akcam v Turkey (27520/07) (2016) 62 E.H.R.R. 12; [2011] 10 WLUK 687 (ECHR) ; Tas v Turkey (6810/09) unreported 4 September 2018 (ECHR); and: Dilipak v Turkey (29680/05) unreported (ECHR).
Language English
Published at https://www.westlaw.com/Document/I3D27E2608CA411E99EFBAD3AD495B442/View/FullText.html?transitionType=Default&contextData=(sc.Default)&VR=3.0&RS=cblt1.0
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