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Pensions as Property

Insights from the European Convention on Human Rights

Pensions as Property cover

Pensions as Property

Insights from the European Convention on Human Rights

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Pre-order. Available Apr 30 2026
$86.40 RRP $108.00 Website price saving $21.60 (20%)

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Description

This book explores the impact of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) when defining and protecting pension entitlements as property rights.

The sustainability of pension systems in Europe is threatened by mounting public debt and demographic shifts. In recent decades, governments have addressed these challenges by implementing reforms to balance financial stability and guarantee adequate retirement benefits. Many of these reforms have faced legal challenges from activists and lawyers in domestic courts, based on 'stand-still' and 'non-retrogression' constitutional principles. However, Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the ECHR offers an alternative approach that protects social security entitlements, including pensions, as private property, deserving of protection against unjustified state interference.

This book explores the historical legal rationale employed by the Court to establish social security entitlements as private property. It further examines how the Court has assessed reforms through a proportionality assessment that weights public interests against individual rights. This analysis distils key principles such as reasonableness, non-discrimination, and fair distribution of burdens that can guide policymakers towards responsible, rights-compliant reform.

Hartmann-Cortés prompts critical inquiry into an often-overlooked framework that will be of interest to policymakers, legal scholars, and anyone engaged in debates at the intersection of pension law, property rights, and social welfare law.

Table of Contents

General Introduction
1. How the European Court of Human Rights Interprets the Convention
2. The Theoretical Architecture of Property Rights in Article 1 Protocol No 1
3. What Counts as Property under Article 1 of Protocol No 1?
4. The Formalistic Doctrine in Early A1P1 Pension Jurisprudence (1971–1996)
5. The Functional Doctrine in A1P1 Pension Jurisprudence (1996 - Today)
6. Pensions as Property: Fair Balance in Pension Reform
General Conclusions

Product details

Published Apr 30 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 224
ISBN 9781509986040
Imprint Hart Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Kevin Hartmann-Cortés

Kevin Hartmann-Cortés is a Postdoctoral Researcher…

Environment: Staging