Gotcha.
Lightspring
From wearables with monitoring chips to face scanners that assess your contentment, workplace surveillance seems to be going in one direction.
Caster Semenya at the IAAF Diamond League athletics meeting in Doha, Qatar, 03 May 2019.
Noushad Thekkayil/EPA
If the Semenya ruling by the Court for Arbitration in Sport remains unchallenged, this way of thinking and behaving might filter into the International Olympic Committee
British forces on patrol in Basra, Iraq in 2003.
PA Archive
Soldier amnesty plans pose grave challenges to human rights – and set the stage for a future showdown with the European Court of Human Rights.
cosmaa/Shutterstock
Mistaken links between the EU and the European Convention on Human Rights could be one factor that sees the UK losing out on these vital supranational laws.
Scots law offers three possible verdicts: guilty, not guilty and not proven.
Shutterstock
Despite its controversial nature, new research into the not proven verdict shows it helps juries ascribe guilt more adequately.
Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov at the UN Security Council.
EPA/Justin Lane
Despite its reputation, Russia has contributed much more to international law than it's sometimes given credit for.
German prisoners of war helped to construct the road leading to Wembley stadium in 1948.
PA Archive
... and why their treatment angered human rights campaigners at the time.
Winston Churchill was a strong proponent of the European Convention on Human Rights.
PA/PA Archive
The Conservative party manifesto's repudiation of the ‘libertarian right’ bodes ill for the European Court of Human Rights.
Anders Breivik during the appeal hearing in January.
Lise Aaserud/EPA
A Norwegian appeal court has ruled that the mass murderer's human rights are not being violated by the conditions of his imprisonment.
The Libyan rebel leader Abdel Hakim Belhaj who has won the right to sue former British foreign secretary Jack Straw.
Mohamed Messara/EPA
Three key rulings by the UK Supreme Court and their legal implications.
The Norwegian government wants the right to keep Anders Behring Breivik i solitary confinement.
Lise Aserud/EPA
The European Court of Human Rights will consider whether Breivik's human rights have been violated by his solitary detention.
British soldiers on the outskirts of Basra in 2007.
Cathal McNaughton / PA Archive
The UK government plans to suspend parts of the European Convention on Human Rights in future conflicts.
All together now.
Syda Productions
Nicola Sturgeon's 'named person' plan for supporting children is a good idea with a major flaw.
Don’t turn off the lights.
Sam72/www.shutterstock.com
It is no threat to UK sovereignty and protects vulnerable citizens – so why replace the Human Rights Act?
May: Brexit from the ECHR.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
The home secretary is campaigning against Brexit, but with a caveat.
Justice Secretary Michael Gove is overseeing human rights reform.
Lauren Hurley/PA
The Conservatives have got it half-right by seeking to repeal the Human Rights Act. Too bad they want to replace it with something almost as unhelpful.
Legal folly and un-Conservative.
PA/Matt Dunham
Cameron backs down on plans to cut ties with Europe to avoid a backbench revolt -- but this isn't over.
Proud justice. But for how long?
Ben Sutherland
Citizens need to be able to seek remedies for breaches of human rights in our own courts.
Found at sea.
Valentino Cilmi/EPA
You'd think that the "conscience of Europe" would strive to protect migrants' human rights.
North Korea is in a human rights spat with the US.
EPA
North Korea is outraged over an upcoming conference in Washington DC about its human rights abuses, to which it has not been invited. Pyongyang strongly denies that it has been alienating the human rights…