Constitutional Justice under Populism: The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Alphen aan den Rijn
Wolters Kluwer Law International
2024
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (250 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9789403520483 |
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505 | 8 | |a Front cover -- Constitutional Justice under Populism -- Title -- Copyright -- Table of content -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW,CONSTITUTIONAL COURTSAND THE INSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGESOF THE 21ST CENTURY IN EUROPE -- 2. THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURTOF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW.THE BEGINNINGS -- 2.1. Concerning the transformation -- 2.2. The experience of competences -- 2.2.1. The constitutional complaint -- 2.2.1.1. Against a judicial decision.Review of the constitutionality of the law applied -- 2.2.1.2. Review of legislation wherethe application directly infringes fundamental rights -- 2.2.1.3. Against a judicial decision: Review of the constitutionalityof a judicial decision -- 2.2.2. Judicial referral - concrete norm control -- 2.2.3. Ex-post abstract norm control -- 2.2.4. Preliminary abstract norm control -- 2.3. The approach to the pre-Fundamental Lawcase law -- 2.4. The role of international law and EU law -- 3. AFTER THE BEGINNING -NEW CHALLENGES - NEW RESPONSES -- 3.1. The principles of interpretation -- 3.1.1. A new set of interpretative methods or a reformulationof classic interpretative methods? -- 3.1.2. Application of mandatory interpretation methodsin the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 3.1.2.1. Application of the new mandatory interpretation methods -- 3.1.2.2. Politically sensitive cases -- 3.1.3. Conclusions -- 3.2. Constitutional protection of the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.1. Populist constitutionalism -- 3.2.2. The role of the "constitutional tradition" in the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.3. The revival of the historical constitution? -- 3.2.4. The protection of constitutional identity bythe Constitutional Court -- 3.2.5. Conclusions -- 3.3. Some classic dilemmas of constitutionaladjudication in a new light -- 3.3.1. A "countermajoritarian difficulty" -- 3.3.2. Activism and/or deference | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.3.3. Constitutional review of the amendmentof the Fundamental Law -- 4. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THECONSTITUTIONAL COURTAND THE ORDINARY COURTS IN THEPROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS -- 4.1. Constitutional presumptions -- 4.2. The signifi cance of the constitutional complaint -- 4.2.1. Subject of the inquiry -- 4.2.2. Constitutional complaint pursuant to Article 27 of the Acton the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.3. Figures on inclusiveness and success rates -- 4.2.4. The traditional approach - the importanceof the admissibility procedure in the relationship betweenthe ordinary court and the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.4.1. Admissibility: what is "prejudice to a right guaranteed bythe Fundamental Law?" -- 4.2.4.2. Admissibility: what is the fundamental constitutional issue? -- 4.2.5. Conclusions -- 4.3. The enforcement of fundamental rightsin the practice of ordinary courts and the roleof the Constitutional Court -- 4.3.1. Introduction -- 4.3.2. The starting point - the purpose of the legal construct -- 4.3.3. Th e doctrine of horizontal eff ect and the new constitutionalbases - lessons from the judicial practice -- 4.3.3.1. Right to property -- 4.3.3.2. Freedom of the press and freedom of expression -- 4.3.3.3. "Police offi cer's portrait" -- 4.3.3.4. Violation of the right to privacy -- 4.3.4. Sub-summary: the horizontal eff ect and its practice underthe Fundamental Law -- 4.3.5. Conclusions -- 5. FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS.HUNGARIAN CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEWIN THE EUROPEAN SPACE -- 5.1. Changes in the practice of the ConstitutionalCourt in the context of the economic crisis,the migration crisis, the fi ght against terrorism,national security and the pandemic -- 5.1.1. The standards of fundamental rights protectionin normalcy and in emergency in Hungary -- 5.1.1.1. The history of fundamental rights protectionin Hungary | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.1.1.2. What is a fundamental right in normalcy and in emergencyin Hungary? -- 5.1.1.3. Content of the state obligation to protect rights -- 5.1.1.4. The test of fundamental rights restrictions -- 5.1.1.5. Standards of human rights protection in the special legal order -- 5.1.1.6. Conclusions -- 5.1.2. The impact of the economic crisis on constitutional jurisprudence -- 5.1.2.1. Background -- 5.1.2.2. Changes in the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.1.2.3. Foreign currency credit loan cases -- 5.1.3. Migration -- 5.1.4. Terrorism threat and security challenges -- 5.1.5. Covid-19 and Constitutional Court in Hungary -- 5.1.5.1. The special legal order -- 5.1.5.2. The complicated practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.2. The Hungarian Constitutional Courtin the European Constitutional Space -- 5.2.1. Introduction -- 5.2.2. European constitutional courts' responses to social,economic and political challenges -- 5.2.2.1. The change -- 5.2.2.2. Continuity and change -- 5.2.2.3. Stability and continuity -- 5.2.3. The exceptions -- 5.2.3.1. Specifi c routes -- 5.2.3.2. The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Courtof Human Rights -- 5.2.4. Main constitutional strategies to address socialand economic challenges -- 5.2.4.1. General solutions -- 5.2.4.2. New interpretative methods and substantive conceptsin constitutional law -- 5.3. Possible reasons for changes in case law -- 5.3.1. European trends -- 5.3.2. Explanation of Hungarian Constitutional Court practice -in a crisis situation -- 6. QUO VADIS, HUNGARIANCONSTITUTIONAL COURT? -- 6.1. On the benchmarks for evaluatingconstitutional review -- 6.2. Not everything is what it appears to be -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Back cover | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina |t Constitutional Justice under Populism |d Alphen aan den Rijn : Wolters Kluwer Law International,c2024 |z 9789403520285 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina |
author_facet | Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina |
author_variant | f g o fgo |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV049875855 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Front cover -- Constitutional Justice under Populism -- Title -- Copyright -- Table of content -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW,CONSTITUTIONAL COURTSAND THE INSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGESOF THE 21ST CENTURY IN EUROPE -- 2. THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURTOF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW.THE BEGINNINGS -- 2.1. Concerning the transformation -- 2.2. The experience of competences -- 2.2.1. The constitutional complaint -- 2.2.1.1. Against a judicial decision.Review of the constitutionality of the law applied -- 2.2.1.2. Review of legislation wherethe application directly infringes fundamental rights -- 2.2.1.3. Against a judicial decision: Review of the constitutionalityof a judicial decision -- 2.2.2. Judicial referral - concrete norm control -- 2.2.3. Ex-post abstract norm control -- 2.2.4. Preliminary abstract norm control -- 2.3. The approach to the pre-Fundamental Lawcase law -- 2.4. The role of international law and EU law -- 3. AFTER THE BEGINNING -NEW CHALLENGES - NEW RESPONSES -- 3.1. The principles of interpretation -- 3.1.1. A new set of interpretative methods or a reformulationof classic interpretative methods? -- 3.1.2. Application of mandatory interpretation methodsin the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 3.1.2.1. Application of the new mandatory interpretation methods -- 3.1.2.2. Politically sensitive cases -- 3.1.3. Conclusions -- 3.2. Constitutional protection of the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.1. Populist constitutionalism -- 3.2.2. The role of the "constitutional tradition" in the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.3. The revival of the historical constitution? -- 3.2.4. The protection of constitutional identity bythe Constitutional Court -- 3.2.5. Conclusions -- 3.3. Some classic dilemmas of constitutionaladjudication in a new light -- 3.3.1. A "countermajoritarian difficulty" -- 3.3.2. Activism and/or deference 3.3.3. Constitutional review of the amendmentof the Fundamental Law -- 4. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THECONSTITUTIONAL COURTAND THE ORDINARY COURTS IN THEPROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS -- 4.1. Constitutional presumptions -- 4.2. The signifi cance of the constitutional complaint -- 4.2.1. Subject of the inquiry -- 4.2.2. Constitutional complaint pursuant to Article 27 of the Acton the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.3. Figures on inclusiveness and success rates -- 4.2.4. The traditional approach - the importanceof the admissibility procedure in the relationship betweenthe ordinary court and the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.4.1. Admissibility: what is "prejudice to a right guaranteed bythe Fundamental Law?" -- 4.2.4.2. Admissibility: what is the fundamental constitutional issue? -- 4.2.5. Conclusions -- 4.3. The enforcement of fundamental rightsin the practice of ordinary courts and the roleof the Constitutional Court -- 4.3.1. Introduction -- 4.3.2. The starting point - the purpose of the legal construct -- 4.3.3. Th e doctrine of horizontal eff ect and the new constitutionalbases - lessons from the judicial practice -- 4.3.3.1. Right to property -- 4.3.3.2. Freedom of the press and freedom of expression -- 4.3.3.3. "Police offi cer's portrait" -- 4.3.3.4. Violation of the right to privacy -- 4.3.4. Sub-summary: the horizontal eff ect and its practice underthe Fundamental Law -- 4.3.5. Conclusions -- 5. FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS.HUNGARIAN CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEWIN THE EUROPEAN SPACE -- 5.1. Changes in the practice of the ConstitutionalCourt in the context of the economic crisis,the migration crisis, the fi ght against terrorism,national security and the pandemic -- 5.1.1. The standards of fundamental rights protectionin normalcy and in emergency in Hungary -- 5.1.1.1. The history of fundamental rights protectionin Hungary 5.1.1.2. What is a fundamental right in normalcy and in emergencyin Hungary? -- 5.1.1.3. Content of the state obligation to protect rights -- 5.1.1.4. The test of fundamental rights restrictions -- 5.1.1.5. Standards of human rights protection in the special legal order -- 5.1.1.6. Conclusions -- 5.1.2. The impact of the economic crisis on constitutional jurisprudence -- 5.1.2.1. Background -- 5.1.2.2. Changes in the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.1.2.3. Foreign currency credit loan cases -- 5.1.3. Migration -- 5.1.4. Terrorism threat and security challenges -- 5.1.5. Covid-19 and Constitutional Court in Hungary -- 5.1.5.1. The special legal order -- 5.1.5.2. The complicated practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.2. The Hungarian Constitutional Courtin the European Constitutional Space -- 5.2.1. Introduction -- 5.2.2. European constitutional courts' responses to social,economic and political challenges -- 5.2.2.1. The change -- 5.2.2.2. Continuity and change -- 5.2.2.3. Stability and continuity -- 5.2.3. The exceptions -- 5.2.3.1. Specifi c routes -- 5.2.3.2. The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Courtof Human Rights -- 5.2.4. Main constitutional strategies to address socialand economic challenges -- 5.2.4.1. General solutions -- 5.2.4.2. New interpretative methods and substantive conceptsin constitutional law -- 5.3. Possible reasons for changes in case law -- 5.3.1. European trends -- 5.3.2. Explanation of Hungarian Constitutional Court practice -in a crisis situation -- 6. QUO VADIS, HUNGARIANCONSTITUTIONAL COURT? -- 6.1. On the benchmarks for evaluatingconstitutional review -- 6.2. Not everything is what it appears to be -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Back cover |
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format | Electronic eBook |
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spelling | Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina Verfasser aut Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 1st ed Alphen aan den Rijn Wolters Kluwer Law International 2024 ©2024 1 Online-Ressource (250 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Front cover -- Constitutional Justice under Populism -- Title -- Copyright -- Table of content -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW,CONSTITUTIONAL COURTSAND THE INSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGESOF THE 21ST CENTURY IN EUROPE -- 2. THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURTOF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW.THE BEGINNINGS -- 2.1. Concerning the transformation -- 2.2. The experience of competences -- 2.2.1. The constitutional complaint -- 2.2.1.1. Against a judicial decision.Review of the constitutionality of the law applied -- 2.2.1.2. Review of legislation wherethe application directly infringes fundamental rights -- 2.2.1.3. Against a judicial decision: Review of the constitutionalityof a judicial decision -- 2.2.2. Judicial referral - concrete norm control -- 2.2.3. Ex-post abstract norm control -- 2.2.4. Preliminary abstract norm control -- 2.3. The approach to the pre-Fundamental Lawcase law -- 2.4. The role of international law and EU law -- 3. AFTER THE BEGINNING -NEW CHALLENGES - NEW RESPONSES -- 3.1. The principles of interpretation -- 3.1.1. A new set of interpretative methods or a reformulationof classic interpretative methods? -- 3.1.2. Application of mandatory interpretation methodsin the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 3.1.2.1. Application of the new mandatory interpretation methods -- 3.1.2.2. Politically sensitive cases -- 3.1.3. Conclusions -- 3.2. Constitutional protection of the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.1. Populist constitutionalism -- 3.2.2. The role of the "constitutional tradition" in the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.3. The revival of the historical constitution? -- 3.2.4. The protection of constitutional identity bythe Constitutional Court -- 3.2.5. Conclusions -- 3.3. Some classic dilemmas of constitutionaladjudication in a new light -- 3.3.1. A "countermajoritarian difficulty" -- 3.3.2. Activism and/or deference 3.3.3. Constitutional review of the amendmentof the Fundamental Law -- 4. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THECONSTITUTIONAL COURTAND THE ORDINARY COURTS IN THEPROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS -- 4.1. Constitutional presumptions -- 4.2. The signifi cance of the constitutional complaint -- 4.2.1. Subject of the inquiry -- 4.2.2. Constitutional complaint pursuant to Article 27 of the Acton the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.3. Figures on inclusiveness and success rates -- 4.2.4. The traditional approach - the importanceof the admissibility procedure in the relationship betweenthe ordinary court and the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.4.1. Admissibility: what is "prejudice to a right guaranteed bythe Fundamental Law?" -- 4.2.4.2. Admissibility: what is the fundamental constitutional issue? -- 4.2.5. Conclusions -- 4.3. The enforcement of fundamental rightsin the practice of ordinary courts and the roleof the Constitutional Court -- 4.3.1. Introduction -- 4.3.2. The starting point - the purpose of the legal construct -- 4.3.3. Th e doctrine of horizontal eff ect and the new constitutionalbases - lessons from the judicial practice -- 4.3.3.1. Right to property -- 4.3.3.2. Freedom of the press and freedom of expression -- 4.3.3.3. "Police offi cer's portrait" -- 4.3.3.4. Violation of the right to privacy -- 4.3.4. Sub-summary: the horizontal eff ect and its practice underthe Fundamental Law -- 4.3.5. Conclusions -- 5. FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS.HUNGARIAN CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEWIN THE EUROPEAN SPACE -- 5.1. Changes in the practice of the ConstitutionalCourt in the context of the economic crisis,the migration crisis, the fi ght against terrorism,national security and the pandemic -- 5.1.1. The standards of fundamental rights protectionin normalcy and in emergency in Hungary -- 5.1.1.1. The history of fundamental rights protectionin Hungary 5.1.1.2. What is a fundamental right in normalcy and in emergencyin Hungary? -- 5.1.1.3. Content of the state obligation to protect rights -- 5.1.1.4. The test of fundamental rights restrictions -- 5.1.1.5. Standards of human rights protection in the special legal order -- 5.1.1.6. Conclusions -- 5.1.2. The impact of the economic crisis on constitutional jurisprudence -- 5.1.2.1. Background -- 5.1.2.2. Changes in the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.1.2.3. Foreign currency credit loan cases -- 5.1.3. Migration -- 5.1.4. Terrorism threat and security challenges -- 5.1.5. Covid-19 and Constitutional Court in Hungary -- 5.1.5.1. The special legal order -- 5.1.5.2. The complicated practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.2. The Hungarian Constitutional Courtin the European Constitutional Space -- 5.2.1. Introduction -- 5.2.2. European constitutional courts' responses to social,economic and political challenges -- 5.2.2.1. The change -- 5.2.2.2. Continuity and change -- 5.2.2.3. Stability and continuity -- 5.2.3. The exceptions -- 5.2.3.1. Specifi c routes -- 5.2.3.2. The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Courtof Human Rights -- 5.2.4. Main constitutional strategies to address socialand economic challenges -- 5.2.4.1. General solutions -- 5.2.4.2. New interpretative methods and substantive conceptsin constitutional law -- 5.3. Possible reasons for changes in case law -- 5.3.1. European trends -- 5.3.2. Explanation of Hungarian Constitutional Court practice -in a crisis situation -- 6. QUO VADIS, HUNGARIANCONSTITUTIONAL COURT? -- 6.1. On the benchmarks for evaluatingconstitutional review -- 6.2. Not everything is what it appears to be -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Back cover Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina Constitutional Justice under Populism Alphen aan den Rijn : Wolters Kluwer Law International,c2024 9789403520285 |
spellingShingle | Gárdos-Orosz, Fruzsina Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 Front cover -- Constitutional Justice under Populism -- Title -- Copyright -- Table of content -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW,CONSTITUTIONAL COURTSAND THE INSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGESOF THE 21ST CENTURY IN EUROPE -- 2. THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURTOF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW.THE BEGINNINGS -- 2.1. Concerning the transformation -- 2.2. The experience of competences -- 2.2.1. The constitutional complaint -- 2.2.1.1. Against a judicial decision.Review of the constitutionality of the law applied -- 2.2.1.2. Review of legislation wherethe application directly infringes fundamental rights -- 2.2.1.3. Against a judicial decision: Review of the constitutionalityof a judicial decision -- 2.2.2. Judicial referral - concrete norm control -- 2.2.3. Ex-post abstract norm control -- 2.2.4. Preliminary abstract norm control -- 2.3. The approach to the pre-Fundamental Lawcase law -- 2.4. The role of international law and EU law -- 3. AFTER THE BEGINNING -NEW CHALLENGES - NEW RESPONSES -- 3.1. The principles of interpretation -- 3.1.1. A new set of interpretative methods or a reformulationof classic interpretative methods? -- 3.1.2. Application of mandatory interpretation methodsin the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 3.1.2.1. Application of the new mandatory interpretation methods -- 3.1.2.2. Politically sensitive cases -- 3.1.3. Conclusions -- 3.2. Constitutional protection of the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.1. Populist constitutionalism -- 3.2.2. The role of the "constitutional tradition" in the identityof the Fundamental Law -- 3.2.3. The revival of the historical constitution? -- 3.2.4. The protection of constitutional identity bythe Constitutional Court -- 3.2.5. Conclusions -- 3.3. Some classic dilemmas of constitutionaladjudication in a new light -- 3.3.1. A "countermajoritarian difficulty" -- 3.3.2. Activism and/or deference 3.3.3. Constitutional review of the amendmentof the Fundamental Law -- 4. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THECONSTITUTIONAL COURTAND THE ORDINARY COURTS IN THEPROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS -- 4.1. Constitutional presumptions -- 4.2. The signifi cance of the constitutional complaint -- 4.2.1. Subject of the inquiry -- 4.2.2. Constitutional complaint pursuant to Article 27 of the Acton the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.3. Figures on inclusiveness and success rates -- 4.2.4. The traditional approach - the importanceof the admissibility procedure in the relationship betweenthe ordinary court and the Constitutional Court -- 4.2.4.1. Admissibility: what is "prejudice to a right guaranteed bythe Fundamental Law?" -- 4.2.4.2. Admissibility: what is the fundamental constitutional issue? -- 4.2.5. Conclusions -- 4.3. The enforcement of fundamental rightsin the practice of ordinary courts and the roleof the Constitutional Court -- 4.3.1. Introduction -- 4.3.2. The starting point - the purpose of the legal construct -- 4.3.3. Th e doctrine of horizontal eff ect and the new constitutionalbases - lessons from the judicial practice -- 4.3.3.1. Right to property -- 4.3.3.2. Freedom of the press and freedom of expression -- 4.3.3.3. "Police offi cer's portrait" -- 4.3.3.4. Violation of the right to privacy -- 4.3.4. Sub-summary: the horizontal eff ect and its practice underthe Fundamental Law -- 4.3.5. Conclusions -- 5. FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS.HUNGARIAN CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEWIN THE EUROPEAN SPACE -- 5.1. Changes in the practice of the ConstitutionalCourt in the context of the economic crisis,the migration crisis, the fi ght against terrorism,national security and the pandemic -- 5.1.1. The standards of fundamental rights protectionin normalcy and in emergency in Hungary -- 5.1.1.1. The history of fundamental rights protectionin Hungary 5.1.1.2. What is a fundamental right in normalcy and in emergencyin Hungary? -- 5.1.1.3. Content of the state obligation to protect rights -- 5.1.1.4. The test of fundamental rights restrictions -- 5.1.1.5. Standards of human rights protection in the special legal order -- 5.1.1.6. Conclusions -- 5.1.2. The impact of the economic crisis on constitutional jurisprudence -- 5.1.2.1. Background -- 5.1.2.2. Changes in the practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.1.2.3. Foreign currency credit loan cases -- 5.1.3. Migration -- 5.1.4. Terrorism threat and security challenges -- 5.1.5. Covid-19 and Constitutional Court in Hungary -- 5.1.5.1. The special legal order -- 5.1.5.2. The complicated practice of the Constitutional Court -- 5.2. The Hungarian Constitutional Courtin the European Constitutional Space -- 5.2.1. Introduction -- 5.2.2. European constitutional courts' responses to social,economic and political challenges -- 5.2.2.1. The change -- 5.2.2.2. Continuity and change -- 5.2.2.3. Stability and continuity -- 5.2.3. The exceptions -- 5.2.3.1. Specifi c routes -- 5.2.3.2. The Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Courtof Human Rights -- 5.2.4. Main constitutional strategies to address socialand economic challenges -- 5.2.4.1. General solutions -- 5.2.4.2. New interpretative methods and substantive conceptsin constitutional law -- 5.3. Possible reasons for changes in case law -- 5.3.1. European trends -- 5.3.2. Explanation of Hungarian Constitutional Court practice -in a crisis situation -- 6. QUO VADIS, HUNGARIANCONSTITUTIONAL COURT? -- 6.1. On the benchmarks for evaluatingconstitutional review -- 6.2. Not everything is what it appears to be -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Back cover |
title | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_auth | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_exact_search | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_full | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_fullStr | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_full_unstemmed | Constitutional Justice under Populism The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
title_short | Constitutional Justice under Populism |
title_sort | constitutional justice under populism the transformation of constitutional jurisprudence in hungary since 2010 |
title_sub | The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary Since 2010 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gardosoroszfruzsina constitutionaljusticeunderpopulismthetransformationofconstitutionaljurisprudenceinhungarysince2010 |