Background. Articles 93 and 94 of the Dutch Constitution provide that self-executing provisions of treaties binding on all persons have direct effect and primacy over conflicting national law. As a result, the Netherlands has accepted unusually open exposure to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), European Union law, and binding United Nations human-rights treaties. Despite this constitutional openness, several recent international decisions, infringement proceedings, and treaty-body observations have identified specific divergences between Dutch domestic law or practice and binding international obligations. Objective. This article identifies, classifies, and documents concrete divergences between Dutch domestic law and binding international law across seven legal domains: health, criminal procedure and fair-trial rights, financial integrity and whistleblower protection, labour and social rights, immigration and asylum, children and family, and anti-discrimination. The objective is not to assert state misconduct as a categorical claim, but to map evidenced compliance gaps capable of supporting reform, litigation, or further scholarly review.
David Adam Dr Braimer (Mon,) studied this question.