🏠 Home Detailed notes Rights essay notes All judgement grids

How to use this

Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.

Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.

Rights protected = did this episode protect individual rights in practice? Courts effective = did the courts succeed in defending rights here? Parliament the protector = did Parliament act as the source or guardian of rights? Parliament the threat = did Parliament limit or override rights here? Executive constrained = was executive power checked in this episode? Convention mattered = did the ECHR do real work in this episode? Significance = is this a case or Act an examiner will reward?

Rights in the UK - judgement grid +   -

Empty version. Print and fill in.
Case / Act+   - Rights protected Courts effective Parliament the protector Parliament the threat Executive constrained Convention mattered Significance
Human
Rights Act
(1998)
Belmarsh
(2004)
Hirst v UK
(2005)
Equality Act
(2010)
Public
Order Act
(2023)
Rwanda
ruling
(2023)
Safety of
Rwanda Act
(2024)
How to use the grid in an essay. Pick the column the question is asking about (rights questions turn on Parliament the protector against Parliament the threat, with Courts effective carrying the other side). Read down that column. Group your essay paragraphs by the cluster the column produces - not by case-by-case description, which the examiner marks down.

Rights in the UK - judgement grid +   -

Filled version. Use this to check your own grid - and tap any cell for the full detail behind the judgement.
Case / Act+   - Rights protected Courts effective Parliament the protector Parliament the threat Executive constrained Convention mattered Significance
Human
Rights Act
(1998)
+Convention rights enforceable in UK courts from October 2000. +Gave the courts the declaration-of-incompatibility tool. +Rights came from an Act of Parliament - the protector case's first exhibit. -The threat is latent: repealable, and the 2022 Bill of Rights Bill tried. +Executive action reviewable against Convention rights. +The Act is the Convention brought home. +The framework every rights case since 2000 runs through.
Belmarsh
(2004)
+Liberty and non-discrimination defended against indefinite detention. +The strongest declaration of incompatibility ever issued. +Parliament amended the law in response (Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005). +The regime struck at was Parliament's own 2001 Act. +The executive's flagship anti-terror policy was checked. +Articles 5 and 14 did the work. +The landmark HRA case.
Hirst v UK
(2005)
-Prisoner voting rights found breached - and barely remedied. -Strasbourg ruled; the UK delayed compliance for over a decade. -The Commons voted to keep the ban. +Parliament defied a rights ruling for a decade and conceded only narrow changes. -Governments of both parties resisted. -The limit case: a finding without an enforcement mechanism. +The proof the Convention binds the UK only as far as Parliament allows.
Equality Act
(2010)
+A unified anti-discrimination framework across nine protected characteristics. -Courts apply it; they did not create it. +The strongest single exhibit that rights come from Parliament. -The opposite of a threat episode. +Public bodies bound by statutory equality duties. -Home-grown statute, not Convention incorporation. +The protector side's flagship Act.
Public
Order Act
(2023)
-Protest tactics criminalised - locking on and slow walking among them. -Courts apply the new limits. -Not in this episode. +Parliament restricting a civil liberty by simple majority. -Extended executive reach over protest policing. -Convention arguments did not stop the Act. +The modern example that statutory rights are removable rights.
Rwanda
ruling
(2023)
+Non-refoulement defended (Article 3 ECHR, Refugee Convention). +A unanimous Supreme Court stopped a flagship policy. -Parliament's response went the other way. -This row was the courts' moment. +The executive's flagship asylum policy stopped. +Article 3 was central to the reasoning. +The strongest modern courts-protect-rights case.
Safety of
Rwanda Act
(2024)
-Disapplied parts of the HRA for removals. -The Court accepted the override. -Not in this episode. +Parliament overrode a rights ruling by statute. -The executive got its policy back by majority. -Statute trumped Convention argument domestically. +The decisive answer to the courts-or-Parliament question.
What the filled grid shows. Read down the columns. Parliament the protector and Parliament the threat are both well populated - the same institution gave the UK the HRA and the Equality Act AND the Public Order Act and the Rwanda override. Courts effective peaks at Belmarsh and the Rwanda ruling and collapses at Hirst and the Rwanda Act - courts protect rights right up to the moment Parliament legislates clearly. The judgement line for the 30-marker: rights protection still depends more on Parliament than the courts, because Parliament can override the courts whenever it chooses - and 2024 proved it does.
See also