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In Basu v. Germany (215/19; Judgment 18.10.2022 [Section III Information Note published; Text of 3rd Section here and here], the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) considered the applicability of Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination) taken in conjunction with Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) to the following set of facts:
In July 2012 two police officers carried out an identity check on the applicant, a German national of Indian origin, and his daughter, on a train which had just passed the border from the Czech Republic to Germany. The applicant asked the police officers why he was checked, and they said it was a random check. One of them later added that cigarettes were frequently smuggled on that train, but confirmed that there had not been any specific suspicion in respect of the applicant in this regard. The administrative courts declined to examine the merits of the applicant’s complaint about having been treated in a discriminatory manner by the identity check. (Basu v. Germany)
The ECHR concluded that (A) "the identity check by the police under these special circumstances had had sufficiently serious consequences for his right to respect for his private life. The identity check in question therefore felt within the ambit of Article 8;" and (B) "the State authorities had failed to comply with their duty to take all reasonable measures to ascertain through an independent body whether or not a discriminatory attitude had played a role in the identity check, and thus had failed to carry out an effective investigation in this regard." (Ibid.).
The folks at the Völkerrechtsblog have now confronted this issue in a very interesting online symposium: Racial Profiling in Germany. "In this symposium, scholars reflect on the European Court of Human
Rights’ recent Basu v. Germany decision. They situate the decision
within recent conversations surrounding race and racism in Germany and
in international human rights discourse more broadly." (Racial Profiling in Germany Symposium). The Symposium Introduction provides a nice description:
In Basu v. Germany, an international body reminded Germany once again of its less-than-perfect human rights record regarding racial discrimination. In this case, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) ruled that Germany had violated the right to privacy according to Article 8 of the European of Human Rights (ECHR) in conjunction with the right to non-discrimination (Article 14 ECHR) by failing to provide a proper and independent investigation into allegations of racial profiling. This symposium takes the decision as a starting point to reflect on the practice of racial profiling in Germany and, more generally, on the place of race and racism in Germany and in international human rights discourse. (Racial Profiling in Germany )
The excellent symposium essays seek to translate the practices at issue in Basu v. Germany into the language of race and racism (and this appears to be an easy case in that respect given the sensibilities of the times). At the same time, the essays provide a doorway through which it might also be worth looking at the larger issues lurking in the background.
I will be posting the Symposium contributions here and will also contribute some brief reflections and engagement with each of the excellent and thought provoking contributions. For this Part 4 we consider Anna Hankings-Evans, "excellent essay, "Race and Empire in International Law." Using the Basu decision "as an entry-point and example," and drawing from the insights of Critical Race Theory, Hankings-Evans argues that "both the structuring power of ‘race’ and its marginalization are a product of the history of international law and its construction of the 'other'.” (Hankings-Evans essay). Basu, then, while a strep in a preferred direction for conception and application of anti-discrimination principles, requires further development. Hankings-Evans then astutely criticizes the jurisprudential conception of neutrality in the context of an objective and reasonable test. The rationale is well known--objective subjectivity is both deeply historically embedded and ideologically constructed. Because, it is argued, international law cannot be detached from its history, and that history structurally embeds the animating notion of racial and ethnic categories as a useful means of ordering the hierarchy of political communities as a basis for constructing pre-21st century imperial orders, the failure to interrogate of whiteness (the whiteness of international law), and individuated administrative subjectivity (intent) in the German context reduces the relevance and value of the jurisprudence. The implications for data based analytics can be profound.Other Essays and Reflections produced for this online symposium may be accessed here:
Part I Introduction
Part 2 Observations on the Case Information Note
Part 3: Observations on Elisabeth Kaneza, "Human Rights Standards for Accountability and Effective Remedies.
Part 4: Observations on Anna Hankings-Evans, "Race and Empire in International Law"
Part 5: Observations on Lisa Washington, "Racist Police Practices"
Observations on Anna Hankings-Evans, "Race and Empire in International Law"
1. Hankings-Evans suggest that Basu "requires practical and feasible implementation" but asks "who is entitled, and more importantly equipped, to assess whether the right level of practicability and feasibility has been reached?" (Hankings-Evans essay). To answer that question, Haskings-Evans focuses on the character of the violation as procedural or substantive. Echoing the Partial Dissent of Judge Pavli (Basu, supra, Partial Dissent ¶¶ 13-18), Hankings-Evans critically interrogates the ECHR conclusion (Basu ¶ 38) that it was "unable to make a finding as to whether the applicant was subjected to the identity check on account of his ethnic origin." True enough, and well interrogated. The answer fits well within the structural argument that is then elaborated. Indeed, reading the Basu opinion's ¶ 38 it becomes clear that the reason for this inability was substantially a function of the standard applied to the definition of prohibited profiling, the embrace of a principle that inclusion of race or ethnicity data in descriptive or predictive policing analytics is not per se prohibited, and the role of intent in an application of the procedural standard to the determination in a specific case. The critical passage in ¶ 38, then, might be centered on the deficiency determined by the court: "whether or not a discriminatory attitude had played a role in the identity check." In effect, the standard adopted in Basu (rather than the "to any degree" standard) made the conclusion reached inevitable. And it is with that standard that the trouble lies. And it is to the interrogation of the foundations of that choice that Hankings-Evans turns.
2. Hankings-Evans then astutely criticizes the jurisprudential conception of neutrality in the context of an objective and reasonable test. The rationale is well known--objective subjectivity is both deeply historically embedded and ideologically constructed. Fair enough. The difficulty, though, is to develop a theory that both rejects objectivity in the context of race in policing but embraces it in the context of social justice and in accountability for the misuse of race and ethnicity in policing. Subjectivity cannot be compartmentalized and then either enhanced or suppressed--or rather it can, but only by foregrounding historical context to the point that it overwhelms both present and future. "Contrary to the histography of race and empire, the ECtHR noticeably focuses on the individual and subjective attitude of the civil servant in its remarks, thereby failing to consider statutory and internal regulations in their entirety and systematic form." (Hankings-Evans essay) This is not to suggest that contemporary social justice is not without powerful enough normative argument. History, however becomes problematic, when the constructions of the past used to develop systems of exploitation, marginalization, colonialism, etc., is then projected onto the future through modulated application to suppress or foreground variations in its social construction to suit strategic and historically grounded policy projects. The rationalization requires more work. And its relation to the imperatives, going forward, of a positive obligation to enhance social solidarity, remains to be explored.
3. Because, it is argued, international law cannot be detached from its history, and that history structurally embeds the animating notion of racial and ethnic categories as a useful means of ordering the hierarchy of political communities as a basis for constructing pre-21st century imperial orders, the failure to interrogate of whiteness (the whiteness of international law), and individuated administrative subjectivity (intent) in the German context reduces the relevance and value of the jurisprudence. The argument suggests that in the face of systemic and culturally embedded imaginaries, the individual falls away, or ought to fall away, from the analytics of discrimination but also the individuality of the individuated objects of discriminatory behaviors giving rise to remedy. Law, in this sense, becomes effective only when it can disaggregate individuals into clusters of collective expression (reductionism) which are then expressed as a n ordering set of historically foregrounded characteristics (essentialism). Individuals are merely, at its limit, the corporeal incarnations of the thrust of historical relationships among collectives performed by and through the managed behaviors of persons. The theory has some power; but it is as yet difficult to reconcile with another great historical construct of European constitutionalism--the apotheosis of the individual and individual agency as the basic ordering concept of collective institutions. This effectively, is the fundamental irreconcilable tension between a characteristics-based historically modulated approach (in which persons merely express the intersections of historical trajectories organized as clusters of outlook and privilege) and the individuated personal agency privileging construction of European constitutional orders. Hankings-Evans effectively suggests that the disjunction militates in favor of a radical transformation of European constitutionalism, at least in the context of discrimination principles and practice.
4. The implications for data based analytics can be profound. On the one hand, a reductionist and essentialized deconstruction of the individual, and their reconstruction as the incarnation of embedded systemic imaginaries, suggests a critical role for data--and especially for data related to key data indicators of such characteristics: race, ethnicity, gender, religion etc. But those factors are then evaluated or given emphasis (negative or positive) as a function of their intersectionality and historical relation. Race and ethnicity, then, in cases like Basu become critical factors. But the criticality is inverted--one does not focus on these markers as elements of intent, but rather as accumulated and interrelated impacts of stigmatization and marginalization, without regard to proof of intent. The proof is one of historical contingency and the interdiction of performances (in the form of police interventions) that mimic the reductionist performance of empire back at the time that empire was viable. Empire becomes the ideal state from out of which metric touching on discrimination (stigmatization and alienation/marginalization) may be developed and applied. One is only at the very beginnings of the consequences of this quite interesting approach. In effect, the issue of data bias is turned on its head.
* * * * * *
Race and Empire in International Law
Basu v. Germany and the Marginalization of Racial Discrimination in Human Rights Discourse and Jurisprudence
14.12.2022
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