Introduction Eva Brems;
Part I. Children:
1. Rewriting V v. the United Kingdom: building on a groundbreaking standard Ursula Kilkelly;
2. Images of children in education: a critical reading of D. H. and Others v. The Czech Republic Sia Spiliopoulou Åkermark;
3. Mainstreaming children's rights in migration litigation: Muskhadzhiyeva and Others v. Belgium Wouter Vandenhole and Julie Ryngaert;
Part II. Gender:
4. Redrafting abortion rights under the Convention: A, B and C v. Ireland Patricia Londono;
5. A noble cause: a case study of discrimination, symbols and reciprocity Yofi Tirosh;
6. From inclusion to transformation: rewriting Konstantin Markin v. Russia Alexandra Timmer;
Part III. Religious Minorities:
7. Rethinking Deschomets v. France: reinforcing the protection of religious liberty through personal autonomy in custody disputes Renata Uitz;
8. Mainstreaming religious diversity in a secular and egalitarian state: the road(s) not taken in Leyla Sahin v. Turkey Pierre Bosset;
9. Suku Phull v. France rewritten from a procedural justice perspective: taking religious minorities seriously Saïla Ouald Chaib; Part IV. Sexual Minorities:
10. Rewriting Schalk and Kopf: shifting the locus of deference Holning S. Lau;
11. The burden of conjugality Aeyal Gross;
12. The public faces of privacy: rewriting Lustig-Prean and Beckett v. the United Kingdom Michael Kavey; Part V. Disability:
13. Unravelling the knot: Article 8, private life, positive duties and disability: rewriting Sentges v. The Netherlands Lisa Waddington;
14. Re-thinking Herczegfalvy: the Convention and the control of psychiatric treatment Peter Bartlett;
15. Rewriting Kolanis v. the United Kingdom: the right to community integration Maris Burbergs;
Part VI. Cultural Minorities:
16. Minority marriage and discrimination: redrafting Muñoz Díaz v. Spain Eduardo J. Ruiz Vieytez;
17. Chapman redux: the European Court of Human Rights and Roma traditional lifestyle Julie Ringelheim;
18. Erasing Q, W and X, erasing cultural difference Lourdes Peroni.