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Hoş geldin, sınırsız olanakların dünyasına, yolculuğun hedef kadar heyecan verici olduğu ve her anın varoluşun tuvaline iz bırakma fırsatı olduğu bir dünyaya. Tek sınırlama, hayal gücünün sınırlarıdır.
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Can the Court Force You to Apologize?
Kurski v. Poland Botticelli, Calumny of Apelles (1494-1495) The Setup: The Politics of Public Apologies Picture this: a live TV debate, a heated politician, and a national newspaper all in the same ring. The main character? Jacek Kurski, a Polish MP back in 2006, ready to call out what he claimed was a “mass propaganda”…
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Sweden’s Most Inconvenient Guests – How To Almost Get a Family Killed with Legal Loopholes
J.K. and Others v. Sweden Caravaggio, Rest on the Flight into Egypt (c. 1597) Sweden- the land of ABBA, IKEA, and humanitarian values—or so we thought. Today’s case of J.K. and Others v. Sweden exposes something far more intriguing: what happens when the love of legal gymnastics leaves an entire family on the verge of…
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When Self-Incrimination Meets Tax Law
De Legé v. the Netherlands Marinus van Reymerswale – The Tax Collector Tax law and self-incrimination: two areas that, when they collide, can raise serious questions about personal rights and state overreach. Today, we’re diving into the De Legé v. the Netherlands case, where a man’s foreign bank account in Luxembourg brought him face-to-face with…
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Whistleblowers, Transparency, and Secrecy: A Defining Moment for Freedom of Expression
Halet v. Luxembourg [GC] Tiepolo, Time Unveiling Truth (c. 1745–1750) In a landmark decision by the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights, the case of Halet v. Luxembourg has set a new precedent for the protection of whistleblowers. This ruling comes just in time for the adoption of whistleblower legislation in countries…
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The Auditorium: A Sacred Space for Learning or a Public Venue Under Watch?
Antović and Mirković v. Montenegro Raphael, The School of Athens (1509-1511) Today, let’s unpack the case of Antović and Mirković v. Montenegro (2017)—a story where two university professors found themselves at odds with the watchful eyes of surveillance cameras installed in their auditoriums. The central question here? Does the presence of video surveillance in these…
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Freedom of Expression or Tolerance Overload?
E.S. v. Austria Osman Hamdi Bey, The Tortoise Trainer (1906) In today’s heated landscape of free speech, Austria brought us one for the books with E.S. v. Austria. It’s got all the juicy bits you’d expect—religion, controversy, and the fine line between saying what you think and going too far. But what really makes this…
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