The Italian Constitutional Court (CC) is a ‘pure’ guarantee body, and, as such, it is not part of any of the three traditional ‘powers’ of the European constitutional tradition (legislative, executive, judiciary), but rather it is a new and independent ‘power’, tasked with enforcing the Constitution as the fundamental law of the Republic. Moreover, Italy is a civil law system, and therefore judicial precedents are not a source of law, and the judiciary is not bound by an obligation of stare decisis. Nevertheless, in Italy, as in every other civil law system, judges normally refer to (non-legally binding) precedents in their decisions in order to reinforce and explain their legal reasoning. This is also true for the CC, which, despite not be...