Protection of Human Rights under the European Convention on Human Rights in Central Europe: Bosnia and Herzegovina

Autor/innen

  • Boris Krešić PhD., associate professor, Faculty of Law, University of Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46941/2025.2.7

Schlagworte:

The Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, The Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, human rights, discrimination, constituency.

Abstract

According to the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH; Annex 4 to the General Framework Agreement for Peace in BiH), the state of BiH is defined as a democratic and legal state with free and democratic elections. By signing the Dayton Peace Agreement and accepting the Constitution, BiH undertook to ensure the highest level of internationally recognised human rights and fundamental freedoms. Thus, the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (better known as the European Convention on Human Rights − ECHR) received a special status in the Constitution of BiH. Similar to other modern democratic and legal states, BiH has signed all the other international and regional instruments for the protection of human rights. Therefore, by insisting on the protection of human rights, it was necessary for all people in BiH, as well as in other democratic and legal states, to have an equal status towards the state and the government, which would ensure measures to overcome antagonisms created on the basis of religious, ethnic, racial, and national diversity in BiH.

Political participation in BiH needs to be viewed as a broader phenomenon that includes not only elections as the basis of democracy and a prerequisite for effective and legitimate decision-making, but also the participation of citizens in everyday political events and life. Furthermore, political participation in a state is limited by ethnicity and territorial origin. This means that only constituent peoples, as guaranteed by the Constitution and numerous laws, are allowed to run for the three-member Presidency of the State or the House of Peoples of BiH. National minorities are excluded from these branches of government, and their political participation is limited solely to local levels of legislative power. Although BiH, according to the Constitution, is considered a democratic state, it is unable to protect the rights of all its citizens and fulfil their basic human rights guaranteed by numerous internationally recognised conventions, but primarily by the ECHR.

Literaturhinweise

Begić, Z. (2015) ‘Legal Capacities of the Dayton Constitution in the Process of Accession of Bosnia and Herzegovina to European Union’, Journal of Politics and Law, 9(1); http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jpl.v9n1p11.

Begić, Z. (2021) O ustavu, legalitetu i legitimitetu – Bosna i Hercegovina od ZAVNOBiH-a do Dejtona i poslije, Sarajevo: Fakultet za upravu Univerziteta u Sarajevu.

Begić, Z. (2024) ‘The Dayton concept of performing legislative and other functions of the parliamentary assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Collapse of the rule of law and effective political democracy’, EU and Comparative Law Issues and Challenges Series (ECLIC), Vol. 8, pp. 163–183; https://doi.org/10.25234/eclic/32275.

Begić, Z., Delić, Z. (2013) ‘Constituency of peoples in the constitutional system of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Chasing fair solutions’, International Journal of Constitutional Law, 11(2), pp. 447–465; https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/mot003.

Haller, G. (2006) ‘Incorporation of human rights treaties into domestic law prior to their ratification in the status of international treaties on human rights’. Council of Europe Publishing. p. 105.

Kecmanović, N. (2007) Nemoguća država: Bosna i Hercegovina, Beograd: Filip Višnjić.

Marić, I. (ed.) (2009) ‘Proces odlučivanja u Parlamentarnoj skupštini Bosne i Hercegovine, Konrad Adenauer, Sarajevo (BiH)’ [Online]. Available at: https://www.kas.de/c/document_library/get_file?uuid=b0549a34-e453-ab40-063f-f3b42dd5279d&groupId=252038 (Accessed: 20 august 2024).

Miraščić, Dž., Begić, Z. (2009) ‘The legal nature of Bosnia and Herzegovina's plural society and the most significant specificities of its contemporary constitutional arrangement’, Institucionalnoustavno pravo zahodnega Balkana, 11/2009, pp. 73-96; https://doi.org/10.4000/revus.1114.

Nystuen, G. (2005) Achieving Peace or Protecting Human Rights? Conflicts between Norms Regarding Ethnic Discrimination in the Dayton Peace Agreement. Boston: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.

O’Brien (2005) ‘The Dayton Agreement in Bosnia: Durable Cease-Fire, Permanent Negotiation’, in Zartman, I. W., Kremenyuk, V. A. (eds.) Peace versus Justice: Negotiating Forward- and Backward-Looking Outcomes. Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Omerdić, D. (2021) ‘The Principle of Constituency of Peoples: An Obstacle to the Achievement of Popular Sovereignty in Bosnia and Herzegovina?’, Društvene i humanističke studije, 6(3(16)), pp. 323-350; https://doi.org/10.51558/2490-3647.2021.6.3.323.

Ribičić, C., Begić, Z., Pavlović, D. (2016) Bosnia and Herzegovina after Sejdić Finci Case. Regensburg (SR Njemačka): Universitätsverlag Regensburg.

Trnka, K. (2000) Konstitutivnost naroda. Vijeće kongresa bošnjačkih intelektualaca. Sarajevo.

Trnka, K. (2006) Ustavno pravo – drugo izmjenjeno i dopunjeno izdanje. Sarajevo: Fakultet za javnu upravu Sarajevo.

Vehabovic, F. (2006) Odnos Ustava Bosne i Hercegovine i Evropske konvencije za zaštitu ljudskih prava i osnovnih sloboda, Asocijacija Alumni Centra za interdisciplinarne postdiplomskestudije (ACIPS), [Online]. Available at: https://osfbih.org.ba/images/Progs/00-16/LP/LPPubs/Odnos_ustava_bih_i_europske_konvencije_za_zastitu_ljudskih_prava_i_osnovnih_sloboda.pdf (Accessed: 02 June 2024).

Odluka Ustavnog suda broj U 26/01, od 28. septembra 2001. godine objavljena je u ''Službenom glasniku BiH'' broj 4/02 od 4. marta 2002. godine. [Online]. Available at: https://www.ustavnisud.ba/uploads/odluke/_bs/U-26-01-51291.pdf (Accessed: 02 July 2024).

The Dayton Agreement consists of the General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 11 annexes to this agreement. [Online]. Available at: https://www.ohr.int/dayton-peace-agreement/?lang=en (Accessed: 20 May 2024).

Downloads

Veröffentlicht

2025-12-30

Zitationsvorschlag

Krešić, B. (2025). Protection of Human Rights under the European Convention on Human Rights in Central Europe: Bosnia and Herzegovina. Europäische Integrationsstudien, 21(2), 279–324. https://doi.org/10.46941/2025.2.7