Abstract

The European Convention on Human Rights is a document that guarantees human rights by limiting the scope to Europe. In the Convention on Human Rights, various human rights are derived and guaranteed by the interpretation of the European Court of Human Rights as well as human rights under the Convention. Among the human rights guaranteed by the Human Rights Convention, there is a right to trial. The right to a trial is the right to a fair trial, the right to a trial within a reasonable period of Consisted. Recently, as movement between countries has become easier, the right to a trial has become an issue not only in domestic judicial procedures but also in the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments. The basic purpose of the right to a trial is to obtain relief from the right through a fair and expeditious trial in an independent court for those who want to settle personal disputes and disputes between innocence and innocence of those charged with criminal trials through judicial procedures. The right to receive such a trial has the character of a subjective right, but it can be seen that the state's discretion is wide due to the nature of the state power called judicial power. Due to the nature of the state power of judicial power, there is also a wide room for the discretion of the state. The European Court of Human Rights interprets the right to a trial under the Human Rights Convention more broadly, and recognizes the right to the recognition and execution of foreign judgments as precedents. In this paper, the meaning of the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments, which have been formed by the precedents of the European Court of Human Rights, and the guarantee procedures and limitations in contracting countries are to be reviewed.

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