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The Impact of the International Right to Housing on National Legal Discourse: Using Data Science Techniques to Analyse Eviction Litigation

Description du projet

Une étude juridique axée sur les données concernant les affaires d’expulsion

Les expulsions forcées constituent une violation des droits de l’homme. Le droit au logement est reconnu par les lois et réglementations internationales et européennes. Toutefois, les affaires d’expulsion relèvent généralement des juridictions nationales, qui ne fournissent bien souvent pas une protection adéquate aux personnes non propriétaires. Le projet EVICT, financé par l’UE, étudiera des milliers d’affaires d’expulsion lors de la crise financière de l’UE (2007-2011). Les résultats mettront en évidence l’impact du droit international au logement sur les législations nationales, le cas échéant. Plus précisément, le projet appliquera une approche axée sur les données dans le domaine juridique, à l’aide de l’analyse de réseaux de procès-verbaux afin d’examiner les interactions entre les législations internationales et nationales.

Objectif

Eviction – the involuntary loss of one’s home – has a devastating impact on people’s wellbeing and has severe consequences for society as a whole. During and after the financial crisis of 2007-2011, over 700,000 people in Europe either lost their homes or were at risk of losing them.

National courts use national laws to rule on whether an eviction is just. However, the right to housing, as laid down in international and European law, often demands more protection of the power- and propertyless than national laws prescribe. As a result, national courts are at the centre of the complex interaction between national and international law. In times of growing national resistance towards international law, the questions whether, how, and why international law impacts on national law are among the most topical that legal scholars face.

Evictions provide a timely opportunity to determine why international rights, such as the right to housing, may or may not have an impact on national law. The financial crisis has led to an enormous amount of case law (legal big data). The combination of the developed, but understudied, international right to housing and these vast amounts of national data offers a unique opportunity to examine the interaction between international law and national law.

It is impossible to analyse all judgments manually. Therefore, I will use a data-driven approach that is unique in the legal discipline. Using citation network analysis, I conceptualise the right to housing as a network of international rights and conduct the first empirical analysis of the impact of this right in case law from national supreme courts and lower level courts. With the use of machine learning, I will identify predictors for courts’ decisions, and explain how these predictors may mirror the right to housing. This approach has long been called for but, so far, rarely been executed. If successful, it could be used in future research projects in other areas of the law.

Régime de financement

ERC-STG - Starting Grant

Institution d’accueil

RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT GRONINGEN
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 1 499 018,00
Adresse
Broerstraat 5
9712CP Groningen
Pays-Bas

Voir sur la carte

Région
Noord-Nederland Groningen Overig Groningen
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 1 499 018,00

Bénéficiaires (1)