“THE BEST INTEREST PRINCIPLE” - A qualitative study on the interpretation of “the child’s best interest” by the European Court of Human Rights and national states
Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to analyse Article 3, commonly known as “the best interest
principle”, from the Convention on the rights of the child (CRC) in European courts. The
European Court of Human Right (ECtHR) is the main court of human rights in Europe and the
CRC is one of many conventions that falls under their jurisdiction. The European states are all
sovereign and has implemented and interpreted the principle in their own ways, despite having
the ECtHR as the guiding court. It is therefore interesting to analyse the potential differences
between the interpretation of the principle in the ECtHR and the national courts.
Children are the future, hence it is vital to safeguard their rights to give them the best possible
chance to a healthy and happy development into society. This analysis used three different cases
that were brought in front of the ECtHR. Furthermore, the study was done through an inductive
content analysis, in line with the threefold concept and the theory of deliberation. The result of
the study shows that there is a difference in how the principle is interpretated in European
courts. Not only between the states and the ECtHR, but also between the different states and
within the ECtHR itself. Finally, the study could also observe, like many others, that the CRC
and “the best interest principle” remains somewhat unclear and is an instrument that is up for
individual interpretation by both national courts, authorities and the ECtHR.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-01-31Author
Sandgren, Lisa
Keywords
European Court of Human Rights, best interest principle, Article 3, Convention on the Rights of the Child, Europe, threefold concept, positive obligations, national courts
Language
eng