The 60th anniversary of the German Constitution provided the backdrop for a Conference at the Australian National University on 22nd and 23rd May 2009, bringing together Australian and German constitutional scholars to discuss core features of the constitutions of both countries. The following issues were presented and discussed from an Australian and German perspective respectively: Federalism as both countries are organized as federations; the concept of human dignity which is a central pillar in the German constitutional and legal system but not mentioned in the Commonwealth Constitution at all; international cooperation and integration as a challenge for any constitutional system in the globalised world; the German Basic Law and the Aus...
This collection of essays explores the history and current status of proposals to recognise Aborigin...
First published in 1989, The Constitutional Jurisprudence of the Federal Republic of Germany has bec...
We can learn from Germany\u27s sixty year old system of basic rights, writes Christopher Michaelsen...
Although the Australian federation came into being in 1901 under the authority of the British Imperi...
At a time when the operation and reform of federal relations within Australia is squarely on the pol...
Over the course of a century, Australia has developed into a prosperous nation and one of the oldest...
Germany has long been at the centre of European debates surrounding the modern role of national cons...
Consensus is the outstanding hallmark of constitutional conventions in Germany-consensus often leads...
Constitutions worldwide inevitably have \u27invisible\u27 features: they have silences and lacunae, ...
A discussion about the legal problems of German unification, taking into account the realms of Germa...
your country. Include information about the type of Constitution (written; unwritten; modifiable by ...
Consensus is the outstanding hallmark of constitutional conventions in Germany—consensus often leads...
tag=1 data=Federalism and the design of the Australian Constitution. by James Warden tag=2 data=War...
In the modern world, the constitutions of nation states have come to be seen as the key guarantors o...
Constitutional law and international law operate in simultaneous conjunction and reciprocal tension....
This collection of essays explores the history and current status of proposals to recognise Aborigin...
First published in 1989, The Constitutional Jurisprudence of the Federal Republic of Germany has bec...
We can learn from Germany\u27s sixty year old system of basic rights, writes Christopher Michaelsen...
Although the Australian federation came into being in 1901 under the authority of the British Imperi...
At a time when the operation and reform of federal relations within Australia is squarely on the pol...
Over the course of a century, Australia has developed into a prosperous nation and one of the oldest...
Germany has long been at the centre of European debates surrounding the modern role of national cons...
Consensus is the outstanding hallmark of constitutional conventions in Germany-consensus often leads...
Constitutions worldwide inevitably have \u27invisible\u27 features: they have silences and lacunae, ...
A discussion about the legal problems of German unification, taking into account the realms of Germa...
your country. Include information about the type of Constitution (written; unwritten; modifiable by ...
Consensus is the outstanding hallmark of constitutional conventions in Germany—consensus often leads...
tag=1 data=Federalism and the design of the Australian Constitution. by James Warden tag=2 data=War...
In the modern world, the constitutions of nation states have come to be seen as the key guarantors o...
Constitutional law and international law operate in simultaneous conjunction and reciprocal tension....
This collection of essays explores the history and current status of proposals to recognise Aborigin...
First published in 1989, The Constitutional Jurisprudence of the Federal Republic of Germany has bec...
We can learn from Germany\u27s sixty year old system of basic rights, writes Christopher Michaelsen...