ABSTRACT

The centrality of human dignity in human rights texts is prominently displayed in Article 1 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, singling out human dignity as a stand-alone right. Paradoxically, the elevation of human dignity has been achieved through the creation of a binary Europe of human rights enunciated in two texts, the EU Charter and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), protected through two autonomous legal orders by two supranational courts. This raises the question of whether the fragmentation of human dignity risks diluting protection of fundamental human rights in Europe. This chapter argues that human dignity, as a stand-alone right, is problematic because it eludes a stable legal meaning, exacerbated by the juxtaposition of human rights values with market freedoms in the EU Charter. Contrary to a commonly held view, a substantive moral vision of human dignity may be elicited through an integrative reading of human rights texts from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the ECHR, and this moral vision is critical to mitigate the risks of degradation of fundamental values in the EU and requires greater engagement of the Court of Justice of the EU with human rights courts.