The present article aims to critically describe and compare how two rather different legal fora – the United States Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights – address the same constitutional issue: the protection of property rights and legitimate expectations in the face of a legal change. According to the US Federal Constitution, the effects of a legal change over patrimonial interests can be treated under the due process of law clause or the takings clause. Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights, alone or in conjunction with the right to a fair trial, plays the same role under the ECHR. Our concluding remarks will show that in both systems, property protection provisions amount to a guarantee ag...
An increasing inflow of immigrants exposes European countries to unprecedented challenges in ensurin...
In the admissibility decision of FJM v UK (2018), the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Arti...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...
The present article aims to critically describe and compare how two rather different legal fora*the ...
This Article asks whether the right to property, as a human right, serves the same general purpose a...
The article discusses the origins, contents and application of the EU Regulation 2016/ 1103 governin...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Transnational Legal Th...
The article analyses the recent approach of the Russian Constitutional Court towards execution of ju...
This article examines the nature of legitimate expectations in international investment law. The aut...
This article provides an overview of the key principles of the state's fulfilmentt of the positive o...
In the presented article we develop the thesis that constitutional courts may be treated as one of t...
Constitutional courts (CCs) are more and more often facing a situation in which the status of entiti...
The Nordic constitutions secure the right to property. A fundamental issue under the constitutional ...
This Article investigates the nature of the right to property guaranteed under the First Protocol to...
The article explores issues of protection of property rights in criminal proceedings in the context ...
An increasing inflow of immigrants exposes European countries to unprecedented challenges in ensurin...
In the admissibility decision of FJM v UK (2018), the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Arti...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...
The present article aims to critically describe and compare how two rather different legal fora*the ...
This Article asks whether the right to property, as a human right, serves the same general purpose a...
The article discusses the origins, contents and application of the EU Regulation 2016/ 1103 governin...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Transnational Legal Th...
The article analyses the recent approach of the Russian Constitutional Court towards execution of ju...
This article examines the nature of legitimate expectations in international investment law. The aut...
This article provides an overview of the key principles of the state's fulfilmentt of the positive o...
In the presented article we develop the thesis that constitutional courts may be treated as one of t...
Constitutional courts (CCs) are more and more often facing a situation in which the status of entiti...
The Nordic constitutions secure the right to property. A fundamental issue under the constitutional ...
This Article investigates the nature of the right to property guaranteed under the First Protocol to...
The article explores issues of protection of property rights in criminal proceedings in the context ...
An increasing inflow of immigrants exposes European countries to unprecedented challenges in ensurin...
In the admissibility decision of FJM v UK (2018), the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Arti...
The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution pro...