What a 'Private Life' Means for Women
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Intersentia
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O'Connell, C., What a 'Private Life' Means for Women, Yves Haeck, Oswaldo Ruiz-Chiriboga and Clara Burbano Herrera, The Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Theory and Practice, Present and Future, Cambridge, Intersentia, 2015, 629 - 645
Abstract
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has emphasised the right to privacy
as it includes an obligation not to interfere in private life. As the Court has
expanded upon the definition of the right to privacy, it has determined that as
much as there is an inherent negative obligation for the state to respect the right
to privacy, there is equally a positive duty for the state to protect and promote
the right to private life. In the context of women’s rights, where a considerable
number of rights violations occur in the private sphere, regulation of private life
in the form of protection from discrimination and violence is fundamental to
the promotion of women’s human rights. However, as it stands, regulation in the
private sphere is most often concerned with interference in women’s decisionmaking
and autonomy. While the Court has included in the definition of the
right to privacy provisions for women such as reproductive health services, it has
failed to apply this definition to subsequent women’s rights violations. Despite
developments in rhetoric, the Inter-American Court has been reluctant to
traverse the divide that exists between the public and private spheres, which can
ultimately prove detrimental to the advancement of women’s enjoyment of their
rights in the region.
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Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/coconne5
Other Titles: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Theory and Practice, Present and Future
Publisher: Intersentia
Type of material: Book Chapter

