ISBN-13: 9789462652729 / Angielski / Twarda / 2019 / 1522 str.
ISBN-13: 9789462652729 / Angielski / Twarda / 2019 / 1522 str.
Part I: Introduction.- Chapter 1. Revisiting the Role and Future of National Constitutions in European and Global Governance: Introduction to the Research Project.- Chapter 2. Questionnaire for the Network of Constitutional Experts of the Research Project ‘The Role of National Constitutions in European and Global Governance’.- Part II. Political/Evolutionary Constitutions: The Predominant Role of Parliament with the Absence of or a Weak Role for a Constitutional Court, and a Generic or ECHR-Based Bill of Rights.- Chapter 3. Europe’s Gift to the United Kingdom’s Unwritten Constitution – Juridification.- Chapter 4. The Constitution of Malta: Reflections on New Mechanisms for Synchrony of Values in Different Levels of Governance.- Chapter 5. The Netherlands: The Pragmatics of a Flexible, Europeanised Constitution.- Chapter 6. The Constitution of Luxembourg in the Context of EU and International Law as ‘Higher Law’.- Chapter 7. The Role of the Danish Constitution in European and Transnational Governance.- Chapter 8. The Constitution of Sweden and European Influences: The Changing Balance between Democratic and Judicial Power.- Chapter 9. Finland: European Integration and International Human Rights Treaties as Sources of Domestic Constitutional Change and Dynamism.- Part III: The Post-Totalitarian Constitutions of the ‘Old’ Member States: An Extensive Bill of Rights, Rule of Law Safeguards and Constitutional Review by a Constitutional Court.- Chapter 10. European Constitutionalism and the German Basic Law.- Chapter 11. The Constitution of Italy: Axiological Continuity between the Domestic and International Levels of Governance?.- Chapter 12. The Constitution of Spain: The Challenges for the Constitutional Order under European and Global Governance.- Chapter 13. Portugal: The Impact of European Integration and the Economic Crisis on the Identity of the Constitution.- Chapter 14. The Constitution of Greece: EU Membership Perspectives.- Part IV: The Post-Totalitarian Constitutions of the ‘New’ Member States from the Post-Communist Area: A Detailed Bill of Rights, Rule of Law Safeguards and Constitutional Review Entrenched after the Recent Memory of Arbitrary Exercise of Power.- Chapter 15. The Future Mandate of the Constitution of Slovenia: A Potent Tradition Under Strain.- Chapter 16. The Role of the Polish Constitution (Pre-2016): Development of a Liberal Democracy in the European and International Context.- Chapter 17. The Czech Republic: From a Euro-Friendly Approach of the Constitutional Court to Proclaiming a Court of Justice Judgment Ultra Vires.- Chapter 18. Slovakia: Between Euro-Optimism and Euro-Concerns.- Chapter 19. The Constitution of Estonia: The Unexpected Challenges of Unlimited Primacy of EU Law.- Chapter 20. The Constitution of Latvia – A Bridge Between Traditions and Modernity.- Chapter 21. The Constitutional Experience of Lithuania in the Context of European and Global Governance Challenges.- Chapter 22. Romania – The Vagaries of International Grafts on Unsettled Constitutions.- Chapter 23. The Bulgarian Constitutional Order, Supranational Constitutionalism and European Governance.- Chapter 24. The Constitution of Croatia in the Perspective of European and Global Governance.- Part V: Normative-Hybrid Constitutions: Combining Strong and Elastic Elements, e.g. an Older or ECHR-Based Bill of Rights.- Chapter 25. The Constitution of France in the Context of EU and Transnational Law: An Ongoing Adjustment and Dialogue to be Improved.- Chapter 26. The Belgian Constitution: The Efficacy Approach to European and Global Governance.- Chapter 27. The Constitution of Austria in International Constitutional Networks: Pluralism, Dialogues and Diversity.- Chapter 28. Ireland: The Constitution of Ireland and EU Law: The Complex Constitutional Debates of a Small Country.- Chapter 29. The Cypriot Constitution under the Impact of EU Law: An Asymmetrical Formation.- Part VI: Specific Constitutional Developments.- Chapter 30. Introductory Editorial Note to the Hungarian Report: The Pre-2010 Rule of Law Achievements and Post-2010 Illiberal Turn.- Chapter 31. Hungary: Constitutional (R)evolution or Regression?.- Part VII: Reforming the National Constitution in View of Global Governance.- Chapter 32. Constitutionalisation and Democratisation of Foreign Affairs: The Case of Switzerland.
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