When the European Union was founded, it was assumed that all Member States admitted as consolidated democracies would maintain their constitutional commitments. In recent years, Hungary and Poland have challenged this premise as elected autocratic governments in those countries have captured independent institutions and threatened long-term democracy. The judiciaries of these countries have been hard hit. In this paper, we trace what has happened to the judiciaries in Hungary and Poland, showing how first the constitutional courts and then the ordinary judiciary have been brought under the control of political forces so that there is no longer a separation of law and politics. We also explore why the European Union has so far not been able ...
the article analyzes the current rule of law crisis in Hungary and Poland trying to discover the cau...
This article offers an opening to Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) situation and attacks against the...
Recent developments in Hungarian constitutional and judicial politics have given impetus to question...
What can the Hungarian and Polish experiences teach us about the processes of decreasing judicial in...
How should the European Union cope with Member States that no longer respect the basic values of the...
Judicial independence has been a particularly salient issue in the context of the rule of law in dem...
This thesis investigates the state of the Hungarian judiciary, in terms of judicial independence and...
Published online: October 2021On 7 October 2021 the Polish Constitutional Court delivered its judgme...
Published online: 4 February 2022Whilst it is up to the European Union’s Member States to ‘provide r...
Although events in Poland have overshadowed concerns about constitutional degeneration in Hungary, a...
This article examines judicial reforms in the new member states of the EU in a comparative perspecti...
By winning both the presidency and a majority of seats in the Parliament in 2015, the Law and Justic...
In a multi-level, non-hierarchical court system, where courts at the upper echelon do not have the p...
The rule of law, judicial independence and separation of powers are values guaranteed in constitutio...
The essay analyses the constitutional developments in Hungary since 2010 comparing them with those o...
the article analyzes the current rule of law crisis in Hungary and Poland trying to discover the cau...
This article offers an opening to Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) situation and attacks against the...
Recent developments in Hungarian constitutional and judicial politics have given impetus to question...
What can the Hungarian and Polish experiences teach us about the processes of decreasing judicial in...
How should the European Union cope with Member States that no longer respect the basic values of the...
Judicial independence has been a particularly salient issue in the context of the rule of law in dem...
This thesis investigates the state of the Hungarian judiciary, in terms of judicial independence and...
Published online: October 2021On 7 October 2021 the Polish Constitutional Court delivered its judgme...
Published online: 4 February 2022Whilst it is up to the European Union’s Member States to ‘provide r...
Although events in Poland have overshadowed concerns about constitutional degeneration in Hungary, a...
This article examines judicial reforms in the new member states of the EU in a comparative perspecti...
By winning both the presidency and a majority of seats in the Parliament in 2015, the Law and Justic...
In a multi-level, non-hierarchical court system, where courts at the upper echelon do not have the p...
The rule of law, judicial independence and separation of powers are values guaranteed in constitutio...
The essay analyses the constitutional developments in Hungary since 2010 comparing them with those o...
the article analyzes the current rule of law crisis in Hungary and Poland trying to discover the cau...
This article offers an opening to Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) situation and attacks against the...
Recent developments in Hungarian constitutional and judicial politics have given impetus to question...