Saturday, March 28, 2026

R v. Sparrow (Canada, 1990): The Starting Point for Interpreting Indigenous Rights

R v. Sparrow (Canada, 1990): The Starting Point for Interpreting Indigenous Rights

“The right was recognized—but how far is it protected?” Canada’s Constitution offered its first answer


R v. Sparrow (Canada, 1990): The Starting Point for Interpreting Indigenous Rights

R v. Sparrow occupies a highly symbolic place in Canadian constitutional history. Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 declares that Indigenous rights (aboriginal rights) are “recognized and affirmed,” but that wording was too abstract. No one clearly knew what those rights meant in practice, or when and to what extent the state could limit them. Sparrow was the first case in which the Supreme Court of Canada presented a systematic interpretive framework in response to that question. After this judgment, Indigenous rights came to be established not as a merely political declaration, but as constitutional rights protected through judicial enforcement. Today, I will calmly organize the background of Sparrow, the criteria the Supreme Court set, and how those criteria influenced later cases.

Case background and facts

The Sparrow case arose when an Indigenous fisher, Ronald Sparrow, caught salmon in British Columbia. He was a member of the Musqueam Band and had long practiced fishing as a traditional means of subsistence. The problem was that federal fisheries regulations at the time strictly limited the size of fishing gear, and Sparrow was charged for violating that rule.

Sparrow did not simply dispute the fact that he “broke the rule.” Instead, he argued that his fishing activity fell within “existing aboriginal rights” protected by Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982. That claim transformed the case from a simple regulatory offense into constitutional litigation asking about the scope of a protected right.

Constitutional issue: The meaning of Section 35

The central issue was the legal meaning of Section 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982, which states that “existing aboriginal rights” are “recognized and affirmed.” The government argued that the provision is closer to a political declaration and does not fundamentally restrict the state’s existing regulatory powers.

By contrast, Sparrow argued that Section 35 is not merely symbolic, but a constitutional norm that substantively binds legislative and administrative power. Therefore, if general fisheries regulation limits traditional Indigenous fishing, the state must be able to justify that limitation constitutionally. Against this backdrop, the Supreme Court had to answer the foundational question: “How should Section 35 be interpreted?”

The Supreme Court’s decision and reasoning

  • Section 35 is a constitutional norm with real legal force
  • Indigenous rights are not unlimited, but the state bears the burden of justification
  • Limitations are permissible only under strict standards

The Supreme Court of Canada made clear that Section 35 is not an “empty declaration,” but a rights-guaranteeing provision that can be enforced through judicial review. At the same time, it stated that Indigenous rights are not absolute, but that the burden shifts to the state to justify any limitation under strict constitutional criteria. This reasoning was later articulated as the Sparrow test.

The structure of the Sparrow test

The Sparrow judgment’s most significant contribution is that it presented a clear constitutional test for evaluating state actions that restrict Indigenous rights. The so-called “Sparrow test” functions as a concrete analytic framework showing that Section 35 is not merely declaratory, but operational in real cases.

  • Step 1: Does the state regulation “infringe” an existing Indigenous right?
  • Step 2: If there is an infringement, can the state justify it constitutionally?

Within the justification stage, two elements are assessed. First, whether the regulatory objective is sufficiently compelling and legitimate—for example, “conservation” or another major public interest. Second, whether the state respected its fiduciary relationship with Indigenous peoples. This includes considerations such as minimal impairment, fair priority allocation, and whether meaningful consultation occurred.

Later cases and the development of Indigenous rights

Case Key development Relationship to Sparrow
Van der Peet “Integral practice” test for defining the core of a right Refined the scope of rights
Delgamuukw Recognition of Aboriginal title Expanded the justification structure
Tsilhqot’in Proactive confirmation of Aboriginal title Modernized Sparrow principles

Subsequent cases did not discard the Sparrow test; instead, they subdivided and expanded it to fit different contexts. As a result, Sparrow came to function as the “basic constitutional grammar” of Indigenous rights jurisprudence.

Key summary for exams and reports

  • The first substantive interpretation of Section 35
  • Establishing the justification framework through the Sparrow test
  • Constitutionalizing the fiduciary relationship between the state and Indigenous peoples

In an exam answer or report, you can accurately capture the core by summarizing Sparrow as a “balanced precedent” that recognized Indigenous rights while placing the possibility of limitation under a constitutional standard.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Did R v. Sparrow recognize Indigenous rights without limits?

No. Sparrow made clear that Indigenous rights are constitutionally protected, but it also held that the state may limit them if it meets strict requirements.

Is the Sparrow test the same as Section 1 analysis under the Charter?

It has a similar structure, but it is not identical. The Sparrow test is a Section 35-specific justification framework, and it includes the fiduciary relationship between the state and Indigenous peoples as a central element.

What does “existing” Indigenous rights mean?

It refers to Indigenous practices, traditions, and activities that already existed at the time the Constitution Act, 1982 was enacted. Later cases further refined the scope and criteria.

Does a “conservation” objective always justify an infringement?

Not automatically. The court also examines whether conservation is truly necessary, whether the infringement is minimal, and whether fair priority allocation and consultation occurred.

Were Indigenous rights strengthened after Sparrow?

Yes. Later cases gradually expanded and refined rights relating to title, resource use, and duties of consultation based on Sparrow’s framework.

How should I summarize Sparrow’s key point on an exam?

Organize your answer around three keywords: recognition of Section 35’s enforceable legal effect, the Sparrow test’s two-step structure, and the shift of the justification burden to the state.

In closing: The judgment that turned Section 35 into an “operational Constitution”

The most important significance of R v. Sparrow is that it did not leave Indigenous rights as merely declaratory text, but made them an operational constitutional norm. The Supreme Court neither elevated Indigenous rights into unconditional privileges nor allowed them to retreat too easily before state regulation. Instead, it presented a framework—“infringement analysis → strict state justification”—showing how rights and public interests conflict and are reconciled within constitutional law. Countless Indigenous rights decisions that followed unfolded on the grammar of the Sparrow test, and that framework remains alive today. Sparrow did not merely deliver a conclusion; it provided a starting point by showing the method of interpreting and applying Section 35 itself. That is why it is repeatedly invoked as “chapter one” of Canadian Indigenous rights jurisprudence.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Donoghue Dogma and the UK Supreme Court (UKSC): Reinterpretation in Modern Tort Law

Donoghue Dogma and the UK Supreme Court (UKSC): Reinterpretation in Modern Tort Law

“Is the neighbour principle still alive?” Subtle signals sent by UK Supreme Court case law


Donoghue Dogma and the UK Supreme Court (UKSC): Reinterpretation in Modern Tort Law

The so-called “neighbour principle” established in Donoghue v Stevenson is both the starting point of English tort law and, at the same time, one of the most frequently misunderstood dogmas. Textbooks often explain it as though all negligence liability ultimately collapses into the Donoghue formula, but the actual development of the case law is far more complex. In particular, in the 21st century, the UK Supreme Court (UKSC), while repeatedly citing Donoghue, has progressively recalibrated its scope and function. This post serves as a “placeholder” for doctrinal organisation: a starting framework to整理 how the Donoghue dogma is being referenced in UKSC decisions and what position it occupies within general duty-of-care analysis. Rather than rushing to conclusions, it focuses on confirming that Donoghue is no longer an all-purpose formula.

The traditional understanding of the Donoghue dogma

Donoghue v Stevenson is often summarised as “the foundational formula for negligence liability.” Under the neighbour principle, a duty of care is recognised toward one’s neighbour—those who may suffer damage that is reasonably foreseeable as a result of one’s conduct. In textbook explanations, this formula is often presented as if it were both the starting point and the finishing point of duty-of-care recognition.

As this explanation hardened into the “Donoghue dogma,” it created the impression that every new duty-of-care problem can be resolved by plugging the facts into the Donoghue formula. But in the actual history of the case law, Donoghue was less a universal formula than a historic breakthrough to expand a responsibility structure previously centred on contract and status.

The Anns test and what came after

From the 1970s onward, Donoghue was reformulated into a formal test structure in Anns v Merton LBC. The Anns test adopted a two-stage structure: (1) proximity and foreseeability, and (2) whether there are policy considerations negating a duty of care. As a result, Donoghue came to function like an “open-ended expansion formula.”

But this expansiveness soon triggered backlash. Amid concerns about excessive expansion of liability, UK courts gradually retreated from the Anns approach and, through Caparo v Dickman, presented a more restrictive, category-centred analytical framework. In that process, Donoghue’s status was repositioned from an “all-purpose formula” to “one starting point among others.”

The UKSC’s duty-of-care approach

  • Respect for existing established categories
  • Cautious, incremental expansion in new categories
  • Donoghue functioning only as a background principle

In recent cases, the UKSC tends not to use Donoghue as a front-line test. Instead, it confirms the relevant established case-law categories and refers to general principles only where necessary. In other words, Donoghue remains a symbolic starting point, but it often does not function as the direct tool for producing the conclusion.

Donoghue citations in key UKSC cases

The UK Supreme Court does not treat Donoghue v Stevenson as a “discarded formula.” However, its function is clearly limited. In UKSC decisions, Donoghue is often cited less as a direct decisional standard in duty-of-care analysis and more as a historical and conceptual point of departure for English tort law.

For example, in cases involving a new duty-of-care category, the UKSC first examines whether the situation falls within an established relationship type in the existing case law. Only if it does not will the court move to Caparo analysis or policy considerations, and in that process Donoghue is mentioned as a general background principle. In short, Donoghue is closer to a “map” than a “key.”

Doctrinal assessment and critique

Doctrinal perspective Position of Donoghue Assessment
Traditional textbooks Universal duty-of-care formula Over-simplification
Case-law-centred scholarship Historical point of departure Functional reinterpretation
Policy-critical view Symbol of liability expansion Emphasises the need for constraint

Recent scholarship tends to understand Donoghue not as a “rule” but as a “language.” That is, it is a narrative point of departure that justifies the duty of care, not a mechanically applicable test.

Key points for doctrinal notes and academic writing

  • Donoghue = a historical reference point, not an all-purpose formula
  • The UKSC adopts a category-centred, incremental-expansion approach
  • Critique of the Donoghue dogma is not “abolition,” but “repositioning”

In doctrinal writing, you can summarise the core position with a sentence like: “The UKSC does not reject Donoghue, but it no longer uses it as a direct test for the duty of care.” This post can function as a basic framework to which individual case analyses can later be added.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Is Donoghue v Stevenson still the standard for determining the duty of care?

It remains important as a symbolic reference point, but the UKSC does not use it as a mechanical decision formula. It is mainly cited as a historical point of departure or a background principle.

Did the Caparo test completely replace Donoghue?

It is closer to a division of roles than a replacement. Caparo is a tool for a restrictive review of new duty-of-care categories, while Donoghue remains at the conceptual foundation.

Why does the UKSC prefer a category-centred approach?

To avoid unlimited expansion of liability and to maintain predictability and legal certainty. This is a choice strongly shaped by policy considerations.

Does criticism of the Donoghue dogma amount to rejecting the precedent?

No. The core of the critique concerns how Donoghue should be understood. It is closer to redefining its function than denying its authority.

What does the scholarly phrase “Donoghue is language” mean?

It means Donoghue is a framework for explaining and justifying the duty of care, not a rule that automatically applies. It is best understood as one mode of judicial explanation.

How should I position the Donoghue dogma in an academic paper?

The least strained approach is to present it not as a “discarded formula” or an “absolute principle,” but as a background principle repositioned within modern UKSC case law.

In Closing: Donoghue Is Not Over, But It Is Not the Center Either

If you organise the Donoghue dogma within the flow of UKSC case law, you arrive at a single conclusion. Donoghue v Stevenson is neither an abandoned precedent nor a master key. The UK Supreme Court continues to respect it, but it does not use it as a formula that mechanically yields the duty of care. Instead, it first checks established liability categories, opts for incremental expansion in new situations, and leaves Donoghue as the background language underpinning those discussions. At this point, the scholarly assessment that “Donoghue is not a rule but a narrative” becomes persuasive. In doctrinal writing or academic papers, what matters is not how broadly Donoghue can be applied, but explaining why the UKSC deliberately constrains its application. Seen this way, the Donoghue dogma has not collapsed; rather, it has found its proper place within the structure of modern tort law.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Hämäläinen v. Finland (ECtHR, 2014): The Boundary Between Legal Gender Recognition and Marriage

Hämäläinen v. Finland (ECtHR, 2014): The Boundary Between Legal Gender Recognition and Marriage

“If you want your gender to be legally recognized, must you give up your marriage?”


Hämäläinen v. Finland (ECtHR, 2014): The Boundary Between Legal Gender Recognition and Marriage

Hämäläinen v. Finland is a case that keeps you uneasy as you read it. That is because it deals with the boundary of whether a state can say to an individual, “We will recognize your legal gender change. But you must convert your current marriage into a different legal form.” In this case, the European Court of Human Rights handled with great caution the point where a transgender person’s identity and family life collide with the state’s authority to design its marriage system. In particular, the part where the Court found no violation because “an alternative exists” makes you reconsider how far human-rights protection should extend. This judgment is both a leading precedent on LGBT rights and a representative example showing how far the margin of appreciation can reach.

Case background and the applicant’s situation

The applicant, Hämäläinen, was registered as male at birth but later transitioned to female and sought legal recognition of her female gender. The issue was that she was already in an opposite-sex marriage and had a child within that marriage. At the time, Finnish law allowed legal gender recognition but did not allow the existing opposite-sex marriage to be maintained as such.

Finland had instead created a system under which the couple could convert the marriage into a “registered partnership” without dissolving the relationship, but the applicant argued that this was not the same status as marriage and that it undermined her family life. In other words, the structure itself—“if you choose legal gender recognition, you must give up marriage”—was the problem.

The European Court of Human Rights did not examine this case as a simple question of whether legal gender recognition should be allowed. The core was whether linking legal gender recognition to a change in marital status violates the right to respect for private and family life.

Issue Question raised
Private life Whether legal recognition of gender identity falls within Article 8
Family life The scope of protection for maintaining the marital relationship
Discrimination Whether transgender people are forced into an excessive choice

Key points of the Court’s reasoning

The Grand Chamber held by a majority that Finland’s system did not violate Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. While recognizing that legal gender recognition is a core element of private life, the Court considered it important that Finland provided a legally protected alternative status instead of allowing the marriage to remain unchanged.

  • Legal gender recognition itself is protected under Article 8
  • Defining the institution of marriage falls within the state’s margin of appreciation
  • A practical alternative exists in the form of registered partnership

The margin of appreciation and its limits

In this case, the Court granted Finland a fairly broad margin of appreciation. It reasoned that because the definition and institutional structure of marriage vary widely across Europe depending on historical, cultural, and religious backgrounds, it is difficult to impose a single uniform standard. In other words, even though legal gender recognition concerns a core aspect of private life, the marriage system itself was still treated as an area for national institutional design.

The Court in particular asked, “Did Finland leave the applicant with no choice at all?” and answered “no.” While it did not allow gender recognition without changing the marital status, the existence of an institutional exit—conversion to a legally protected partnership—proved decisive.

Comparison with other transgender-related case law

Hämäläinen is often assessed as a case that relatively favored the state among transgender-related precedents. Comparing it with earlier cases makes clearer how the Court’s approach shifts depending on the regulatory setting.

Case Court’s approach
Goodwin v. UK No legal recognition of gender change → violation
Hämäläinen v. Finland Alternative status exists → no violation
Later cases Gradual strengthening of LGBT-rights protection

Significance of the judgment and criticisms

This judgment is significant in that it clearly articulated the logic that “if an alternative exists, there is no interference.” At the same time, it received considerable criticism. Doubts remain as to whether requiring a person to give up an existing marriage (or convert it into another form) in order to obtain legal gender recognition truly amounts to a genuine choice.

  • Legal gender recognition is allowed, but subject to conditions
  • Debate over whether the “alternative” is substantively equivalent
  • Risk that the margin-of-appreciation logic may constrain human-rights protection

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Did this judgment deny transgender people the right to marry?

It is difficult to say that it directly denied the right to marry. Rather, it held that there is no obligation to recognize legal gender change while leaving an existing marriage unchanged.

Did registered partnership receive the same protection as marriage?

The Court emphasized that the level of legal protection was substantially similar, but it did not declare it completely identical. This is the core of the criticism.

Why did the Court recognize such a broad margin of appreciation?

At the time, there was no clear European consensus on maintaining marriage after legal gender recognition, so the Court allowed states leeway to design their systems.

What criticisms were raised in the dissenting opinions?

The dissent argued that forcing a choice between legal gender recognition and marriage imposes an excessive burden and constitutes a real interference with family life.

How did the impact of this judgment develop afterward?

As debates expanded across Europe on easing the requirements for legal gender recognition and recognizing same-sex marriage, the logic of this judgment increasingly became subject to re-examination.

Can you summarize this judgment in one sentence?

It held that legal gender recognition is protected, but changes to the marriage system are for the state to decide.

Was “there is an alternative” really enough?

Hämäläinen v. Finland leaves an unusually uneasy aftertaste among human-rights precedents. The Court recognized legal gender recognition as a core aspect of personal identity, yet held that requiring a person to change the legal form of an existing marriage in exchange was not a Convention violation. The basis was that “it is not as though there is nothing at all—an alternative exists.” But whether that alternative was truly an equivalent option for the person concerned, or whether it was closer to coercion in practice, remains a live debate. This judgment shows how the margin of appreciation can be both a shield for human-rights protection and, at the same time, a limiting line. For that reason, this case goes beyond LGBT-rights jurisprudence and forces us to ask how easily we use words like “alternative,” “choice,” and “balance.”

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Iceland v. Geir Haarde (Landsdómur, 2012): The Prime Minister’s Criminal Responsibility in a National Crisis

Iceland v. Geir Haarde (Landsdómur, 2012): The Prime Minister’s Criminal Responsibility in a National Crisis

When a country collapses, how far should a political leader be held responsible?


Iceland v. Geir Haarde (Landsdómur, 2012): The Prime Minister’s Criminal Responsibility in a National Crisis

The 2008 financial crisis shook the entire world, but for Iceland it was a shock close to “state collapse.” The banking system collapsed overnight, and the national finances were forced to shoulder an unbearable burden. In the struggle over who should be held responsible for this turmoil, Iceland made a highly unusual choice: it put the sitting prime minister at the time, Geir Haarde, on criminal trial. And not before an ordinary court, but before a special court that existed within the constitutional order to try high-ranking public officials—the Landsdómur. This case raises weighty questions: “Can policy failure become a crime?” and “Can a failure in crisis response translate into criminal responsibility?” Today, through Iceland v. Geir Haarde, we will calmly examine how far the boundary between political responsibility and criminal responsibility can be extended.

Case background: Iceland’s financial collapse

The 2008 global financial crisis dealt a fatal blow to Iceland. At the time, Iceland’s major banks were operating assets far exceeding the scale of the national economy and were heavily dependent on foreign borrowing. The fragility of the financial system had been warned about repeatedly, but no fundamental government-level response was made.

In the fall of 2008, as the major banks collapsed in succession, a compounded crisis unfolded: a currency crash, a sharp rise in unemployment, and a plunge in national creditworthiness. Public anger moved beyond mere economic failure to the question, “Who had the responsibility to prevent this situation?” and the issue of the political leader’s personal responsibility was raised in earnest.

Charges and legal basis

Based on the investigative commission’s report, Iceland’s parliament concluded that Geir Haarde, who was prime minister at the time, failed to fulfill duties imposed by the constitution and the Ministerial Responsibility Act in the pre-crisis period and the early stages of the crisis. The core point was that “he knew, yet failed to take sufficient measures.”

More specifically, it was alleged that he recognized the risk of financial-system collapse but did not convene cabinet meetings or pursue structural responses, and that he failed to properly activate crisis-management mechanisms. This was framed not as mere policy failure, but as a violation of a legally imposed “duty to act” in office.

The nature and role of the Landsdómur

  • A special court under the constitution to try ministers and prime ministers
  • Determines legal responsibility beyond political responsibility
  • The first case of substantive application in Icelandic history

The Landsdómur is not an ordinary criminal court, but a special court designed to determine the constitutional responsibility of senior public officials. Although it existed on the books, this case was the first time a prime minister was actually indicted and tried before it, which in itself carried major constitutional-historical significance.

The judgment’s content and meaning

In 2012, the Landsdómur acquitted Haarde on three of the four charges and found him guilty on only one. The guilty finding concerned the failure to formally convene cabinet meetings despite the risk of a national financial crisis having become obvious. In other words, the judgment focused not on the outcome of policy choices, but on the non-performance of procedural and institutional duties.

However, the court did not impose a criminal penalty. It stopped at a “declaration of guilt” without imprisonment or a fine, because it viewed Haarde’s conduct as less akin to a serious crime than to a breach of responsibility within the constitutional order. This restrained conclusion both avoided the criticism of political retaliation and clearly affirmed that even the highest officeholder is subject to legal standards of responsibility.

The debate: Political responsibility vs criminal responsibility

Perspective Main argument Implication
Critical view Criminalization of policy failure Concern about chilling political decision-making
Supportive view Equality before the law for those in power Strengthening accountability in democratic governance
Middle-ground assessment Responsibility limited to procedural duties Minimizing criminal responsibility

This judgment provides an important benchmark in that it “did not punish the policy decision itself, but treated as wrongful only the failure to comply with minimal constitutional procedures required in a crisis.” It is evaluated as a case that carefully distinguishes the freedom of political judgment from the realm of legal responsibility.

Key points for exams and reports

  • Criminal-responsibility assessment of a prime minister for failure in national crisis response
  • Distinguishing policy failure from breach of procedural duties
  • A case setting the boundary between political responsibility and criminal responsibility

In exams or reports, you can capture the core accurately by summarizing this case as “a restrained judgment that shows both the limits and the possibilities of holding political leaders accountable.”

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Is this a case in which the prime minister was actually punished?

A finding of guilt was issued, but no criminal penalty such as imprisonment or a fine was imposed. The court chose a method that clarified responsibility while minimizing punishment.

Did the judgment treat the financial crisis itself as a crime?

No. The judgment addressed only the failure to take required procedural and institutional steps after the risk became apparent, not the policy outcome itself.

Is the Landsdómur the same kind of institution as a constitutional court?

No. The Landsdómur is a special court established to determine criminal responsibility for breach of official duties by senior public officials, and it differs in nature from ordinary constitutional adjudication.

Was there criticism that this was political retaliation?

Yes, there was intense controversy. That is why the court recognized the charges only in a very limited way and reached a restrained conclusion without imposing punishment.

Are there similar cases in other countries?

They are extremely rare. Referring a head of the executive branch to criminal trial for failure in national crisis response is, even in comparative constitutional terms, almost unprecedented.

What is the core issue of this case for exam purposes?

The key is to organize your answer around the distinction between political responsibility and criminal responsibility, and the difference between policy failure and breach of procedural duties.

In closing: Holding responsibility, without criminalizing politics

Iceland v. Geir Haarde is a precedent that offers a very cautious yet clear answer to the question, “How far should a political leader be responsible in the face of national failure?” The Icelandic court did not treat the outcome of financial collapse itself as a crime, nor did it use a criminal trial to judge the merits of policy choices. Instead, it addressed only the failure to carry out even the minimum constitutional procedures required once the crisis had become obvious. This decision avoided an indiscriminate conversion of political responsibility into criminal responsibility, while still delivering a message that even the highest officeholder cannot stand outside the realm of law and responsibility. The reason this judgment is repeatedly referenced in comparative constitutional law and theories of public-official responsibility to this day is that it set a “standard” rather than emphasizing “punishment.” It is a rare example of balance that shows how accountability politics can meet the law in a democracy.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

A, B and C v. Ireland (ECtHR, 2010): What Was Scarier Than a “Ban” Was the “Absence of Procedure”

A, B and C v. Ireland (ECtHR, 2010): What Was Scarier Than a “Ban” Was the “Absence of Procedure”

Under the same country and the same law, why did it become “not a violation” for some, but “a violation” for someone else?


A, B and C v. Ireland (ECtHR, 2010): What Was Scarier Than a “Ban” Was the “Absence of Procedure”

When I first read this judgment, I honestly found it a bit confusing. All three (A, B, and C) say something similar: “I could not obtain an abortion in Ireland, so I went abroad.” Yet the Court concluded “no violation” for two of them, and “a violation” for one. When a case deals with the same issue but the outcomes diverge, what makes the difference is often not “principle” but “procedure.” A, B and C v. Ireland stayed with me longer precisely because, rather than declaring a definitive position on abortion itself, it sharply asked whether the exception the state recognized actually worked in real life (that is, whether it was more than a right on paper).

Case Background and the Three Applicants (A·B·C)

In 2010, Ireland was one of the European countries with the strictest abortion regulations. The Constitution provided that the life of the fetus and the life of the pregnant woman were to be protected equally, and in practice abortion was almost impossible except where the woman’s life was directly at risk. As a result, women with unwanted pregnancies were left with virtually no real option other than “traveling abroad.”

Applicants A, B, and C likewise all crossed to the United Kingdom to undergo the procedure because lawful access to abortion was not available in Ireland. On the surface, their situations looked similar, but the Court did not treat them as identical—and that difference becomes the core of the judgment.

Core Issue: Private Life (Article 8) and Abortion Regulation

The core issue in this case was not simply “should abortion be permitted?” The European Court of Human Rights framed a much narrower and more refined question: whether strict restrictions on abortion interfere with an individual’s private life, and if so, whether that interference can be justified.

Issue The Court’s question
Protection of private life Whether decisions about pregnancy and childbirth fall within Article 8
State interference Whether strict abortion regulation can be justified
Effectiveness Whether the permitted exception was actually accessible in practice

Holding: No Violation for A·B, Violation for C

The Court did not lump the applicants together; it assessed each situation separately. This is precisely what makes the judgment a textbook example. For A and B, the Court recognized the hardship and suffering caused by the restriction, but did not view it as an interference that exceeded the state’s margin of appreciation.

  • A·B: The restrictions were harsh, but not a violation of Article 8
  • C: No procedure to determine whether her life was at risk → violation
  • Key difference: not the “ban,” but the “lack of a way to confirm eligibility”

Margin of Appreciation: How Far Can the State Decide?

In this case, the European Court of Human Rights granted Ireland a relatively broad margin of appreciation. Because abortion remains a sensitive moral and ethical issue on which a full European consensus has not formed, the Court recognized that each state may set its regulatory level based on its historical, religious, and social context.

Accordingly, the Court did not declare that “Ireland’s abortion-ban policy itself is automatically a Convention violation.” Instead, it limited its review to whether the policy excessively infringed individual rights and whether minimum protective safeguards existed. This is also why the judgment is often described as “cautious.”

Procedural Duty: The “Permitted Exception” Must Operate

But the Court went one step further. Irish law, in theory, allowed abortion where the woman’s life was at risk, yet the problem was that it was entirely unclear who would decide that, how, and when. C could not find any official procedure to determine whether her situation fell within that exception.

Category The Court’s assessment
Substantive right Abortion aimed at protecting the woman’s life is acknowledged
Procedure No accessible procedure to obtain a determination
Conclusion Violation of Article 8

Meaning of the Judgment and Key Discussion Points

The core message of A, B and C v. Ireland is straightforward. A state may make certain choices on morally contested issues, but it must not make even the rights it itself recognizes impossible to exercise in real life. After this judgment, Ireland faced pressure to reorganize its related laws and institutions, and that pressure later flowed into constitutional-amendment debates.

  • Not a “right-to-abortion” declaration, but a “procedural guarantee” judgment
  • Recognizing state discretion while setting a minimum human-rights floor
  • Providing a benchmark repeatedly cited in later European abortion case law

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Did this judgment recognize a right to abortion?

No. The European Court of Human Rights did not declare abortion a general right. It emphasized, however, that an exceptional abortion the state already recognizes must be capable of functioning in practice.

Why did the Court find no violation for A and B?

For A and B, the Court acknowledged the health and welfare difficulties, but it did not consider them to rise to an interference exceeding Ireland’s margin of appreciation in strongly restricting abortion.

What was the decisive reason C alone was found to be a violation?

Although there was a legal provision allowing abortion where the woman’s life was at risk, there was no official procedure through which she could obtain a determination as to whether she qualified for that exception.

What is the most important human-rights concept in this case?

Alongside respect for private life (Article 8 of the Convention), the key is the idea of “procedural rights”—that procedures guaranteeing a substantive right are indispensable.

Does this judgment affect other countries as well?

It does not impose a direct legislative duty on other states, but as ECtHR case law it serves as an important benchmark for designing abortion-related procedures in Convention states.

Can you summarize the judgment in one sentence?

A state may restrict abortion, but it must not make even the exceptions it itself permits impossible to use in practice.

Why This Judgment Is Uncomfortable—and Why It Matters Because of That

A, B and C v. Ireland continues to be cited not because it provides a clean answer, but because it leaves an uncomfortable question behind. The Court did not definitively state that there is a right to abortion, nor that there is not. Instead, it pressed a very practical standard: “Does the right the state says it allows actually function in real life?” If, on the face of the legal text, a right seems to exist, but the person concerned must turn back at the doorway, can we truly say that right exists? This judgment makes clear that human rights are not only a matter of declaration, but a matter of institutional structure and procedure. That is why this case, while an abortion judgment, is also a decision that makes us re-examine every “exception clause” and every “conditional right.”

Monday, March 23, 2026

McGee v. Attorney General (Ireland, 1974): The Constitutional Discovery of the Right to Privacy

McGee v. Attorney General (Ireland, 1974): The Constitutional Discovery of the Right to Privacy

A single law banning contraception brought to the surface a “right not written into the Constitution.”


McGee v. Attorney General (Ireland, 1974): The Constitutional Discovery of the Right to Privacy

McGee v. Attorney General is a decisive turning point that can never be left out when discussing Irish constitutional case law. In 1970s Ireland, importing and selling contraceptives was itself a criminal offense, and private sexual and family life was widely assumed to fall naturally within the scope of state regulation. Yet, in this case, the Supreme Court recognized the “marital right to privacy”—a right not expressly stated anywhere in the constitutional text—as a constitutional right. When I first encountered the judgment, what struck me most was that the Court did not say, “If it is not in the Constitution, it is not a right.” Instead, it read a new fundamental right out of the Constitution’s structure and values. For that reason, the McGee judgment is evaluated not as a simple contraception case, but as a case that transformed constitutional interpretive methodology itself. Today, I will carefully organize how the Irish Supreme Court discovered the right to privacy in this case and what impact that discovery had on later case law and social change.

Case background: The contraception ban and the start of the litigation

In early 1970s Ireland, importing and selling contraceptives was completely prohibited by law. The legislation reflected strong Catholic ethics, and at the time, there was a broadly entrenched view in society that private sexual life and family planning were legitimate objects of public regulation. The problem was that this restriction applied with no exception even to married couples.

Mrs. McGee faced serious health risks if she became pregnant again, but she could not obtain contraceptives legally. She ultimately filed suit, arguing that the law violated her constitutional rights, and the case expanded beyond a simple criminal or administrative dispute into a constitutional question: “How far may the state intrude into the private sphere of a married couple?”

Constitutional issue: A right that is not expressly stated

The central difficulty in this case was that the Irish Constitution does not expressly state a “right to privacy” or a “freedom to use contraception.” The government argued that a court cannot create new rights that are not in the constitutional text. In other words, contraception regulation was said to fall within the legislature’s policy judgment.

By contrast, the plaintiff emphasized that the Constitution provides special protection for marriage and the family. The claim was that state interference even with a couple’s intimate decisions—especially decisions directly connected to health and childbirth—contradicted the Constitution’s foundational structure and the ideal of human dignity. In the end, the issue condensed into one question: “Even if a right is not written down, can a right nonetheless be necessarily derived from the Constitution?”

The Supreme Court’s reasoning and logic

  • Deriving a private sphere for spouses from the constitutional provisions protecting marriage and the family
  • Finding that a blanket ban on contraception is excessive state intrusion
  • Treating the Constitution as a value system, not a closed list of enumerated rights

The Supreme Court held that, even if the Constitution does not expressly enumerate the right, a “marital right to privacy” can be derived from constitutional values such as human dignity and the protection of the family. Accordingly, it declared that a law imposing a blanket prohibition on importing contraceptives violated the Constitution.

The constitutional meaning of the right to privacy

The core of the McGee judgment lies less in formally naming a standalone “right to privacy” than in recognizing the inviolability of a private sphere within the Constitution’s overall structure. The Supreme Court understood the constitutional provisions protecting marriage and the family as guaranteeing not only an institutional framework, but also the intimate decisions made within that framework.

In particular, it held that decisions by spouses about when and how to have children are not matters the state can regulate uniformly. This interpretation did not reduce privacy to “a narrow freedom to keep things secret,” but instead treated it as a core element of human dignity and personal autonomy.

Subsequent case law and social impact

Area of impact Nature of change Significance
Legislation Step-by-step relaxation of contraception regulation Reduction of the scope of state interference
Case law Expanded recognition of unenumerated rights Greater flexibility in constitutional interpretation
Social attitudes Greater respect for private decision-making Strengthened rights-consciousness

After the McGee judgment, Irish constitutional adjudication developed in the direction of recognizing “unenumerated rights.” This became the foundation for later debates relating to divorce, sexual autonomy, and medical decision-making.

Key takeaways for exams and reports

  • A leading case on the recognition of unenumerated rights
  • Deriving privacy from provisions protecting marriage and the family
  • Setting constitutional limits on excessive moral legislation by the state

In an exam answer, you can accurately capture the core by presenting McGee as both “the discovery of a constitutional right to privacy” and “a case that interpreted the Constitution as a living document.”

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Is McGee simply a decision that allowed contraception?

No. The key point is not contraception itself, but that the Court set a constitutional limit on how far the state can regulate a married couple’s private decisions.

Is it problematic for a court to recognize rights not written into the Constitution?

The Supreme Court interpreted the Constitution not as fixed sentences, but as a value system. Unenumerated rights are understood as rights derived from the Constitution’s spirit.

Isn’t there also criticism that this judgment infringed the legislature’s power?

That criticism exists. However, the Court explained that it was not replacing legislation, but declaring the constitutional limits of regulation that violates the Constitution.

Is the same right to privacy recognized for unmarried people?

McGee was discussed primarily in the context of spouses, but later case law shows a tendency to expand toward an individual right to privacy.

Is it similar to the United States case Griswold v. Connecticut?

Yes, in that both recognize a marital right to privacy. The difference is that McGee grounded the right in Ireland’s specific constitutional provisions protecting the family.

What keywords matter most for an exam?

It is helpful to organize your answer around keywords such as unenumerated rights, the right to privacy, protection of marriage and the family, and a “living” constitutional interpretation.

In closing: The Constitution did not remain silent

McGee v. Attorney General squarely overturned the idea that “if it is not written in the Constitution, it is not a right.” The Irish Supreme Court read the Constitution not as a mere collection of clauses, but as a normative value system in which human dignity and the protection of the family are alive. As a result, it drew a clear line: beyond the concrete issue of a contraception ban, there are constitutional limits on how far the state may intrude into the most private human decisions. After the judgment, the right to privacy and unenumerated rights became major axes of Irish constitutional interpretation, and society, too, came to adopt a far broader perspective on personal autonomy than before. McGee continues to be cited today because it is not just a product of its time, but an exemplary case showing how a constitution can and should “converse” with a changing society.

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