This Article explores whether and how contemporary constitutionalism may have triggered or facilitated populism and its illiberal agenda. In particular, it focuses on some of the legal doctrines that have characterized the growth of transnational and supranational judicial fora, contrasting them with populism in Europe. The Article first sketches the role of courts in shaping contemporary transnationalism and supranationalism in Europe. Then, it analyzes the role that the ideals of progress and equality have played in the judicialization of pan-European legal culture. Finally, it ponders the consequences of the constitutionalization process of European law for the role of democratically accountable institutions
The article offers an analysis of the particular type of populism that has evolved in ECE, most nota...
What role do public law and liberal constitutionalism play in an era of political populism? This art...
The sociology of constitutionalism emphasizes the duality of constitutions as both power limitations...
This Article explores whether and how contemporary constitutionalism may have triggered or facilitat...
This article analyzes the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) from the perspective of the recent ...
The main argument is that the contemporary manifestations of right-wing populism in Europe ought to ...
The birth and spread of the term ‘populist constitutionalism’ shows that one of the distinctive feat...
Published online: 25 April 2019The article considers populism not as common ideology but as a common...
The central objective of the post-socialist European countries which are also Member States of the E...
This article critically assesses the transformation of national constitutional courts’ place in the ...
The article offers an analysis of the particular type of populism that has evolved in Eastern and Ce...
The article submits that EU law has profoundly been changing the role of courts in Europe, from prot...
This paper addresses the relationship between populism and constitutional courts, with reference to ...
Populist constitutionalism is an increasingly discussed topic, but so far the analysis of the interr...
There is a modest but growing scholarly interest in populism in relation to the law and to judicial ...
The article offers an analysis of the particular type of populism that has evolved in ECE, most nota...
What role do public law and liberal constitutionalism play in an era of political populism? This art...
The sociology of constitutionalism emphasizes the duality of constitutions as both power limitations...
This Article explores whether and how contemporary constitutionalism may have triggered or facilitat...
This article analyzes the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) from the perspective of the recent ...
The main argument is that the contemporary manifestations of right-wing populism in Europe ought to ...
The birth and spread of the term ‘populist constitutionalism’ shows that one of the distinctive feat...
Published online: 25 April 2019The article considers populism not as common ideology but as a common...
The central objective of the post-socialist European countries which are also Member States of the E...
This article critically assesses the transformation of national constitutional courts’ place in the ...
The article offers an analysis of the particular type of populism that has evolved in Eastern and Ce...
The article submits that EU law has profoundly been changing the role of courts in Europe, from prot...
This paper addresses the relationship between populism and constitutional courts, with reference to ...
Populist constitutionalism is an increasingly discussed topic, but so far the analysis of the interr...
There is a modest but growing scholarly interest in populism in relation to the law and to judicial ...
The article offers an analysis of the particular type of populism that has evolved in ECE, most nota...
What role do public law and liberal constitutionalism play in an era of political populism? This art...
The sociology of constitutionalism emphasizes the duality of constitutions as both power limitations...