The New Regulation on the Rule of Law Conditionality: a Controversial Tool with Some Potential

The New Regulation on the Rule of Law Conditionality: a Controversial Tool with Some Potential

Antonia BARAGGIA

On 11 December 2020, the European Council (EUCO) issued its conclusions on the draft Regulation of the European Parliament and Council on a general regime of conditionality for the protection of the Union Budget. They decided to postpone the enforcement of the rule of law mechanism until the Court of Justice has issued judgment on the validity of the Regulation.

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Symposium: Reevaluating the 1973 Judgment of the Supreme Court of Japan as a Landmark Judgment

Symposium: Reevaluating the 1973 Judgment of the Supreme Court of Japan as a Landmark Judgment

Akiko EJIMA

It must be a daunting task for a court to use judicial power for the first time when there are no precedents on which to rely. This was the task facing the Supreme Court of Japan (SCJ) in 1973. The power of judicial review is clearly stated in article 81 of the Constitution of Japan (1946) in contrast to it being a matter of implication in the US Constitution, which is often seen as the role model for Japan.

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The Presidential Succession in Peru: Three Presidents in Seven Days

The Presidential Succession in Peru: Three Presidents in Seven Days

César LANDA

Democracy is the bedrock of the constitutional state under the rule of law, a state whose purpose is to protect fundamental rights and maintain checks on the exercise of power. At present, however, the model of semi-presidential democracy established by the Peruvian Constitution is marked by significant tensions…

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Anti-Democratic Constitutional Landmarks: Myanmar’s Constitutional Tribunal and the Right to Vote

Anti-Democratic Constitutional Landmarks: Myanmar’s Constitutional Tribunal and the Right to Vote

Melissa CROUCH

The idea of constitutional landmarks contains a set of basic presumptions. It presumes that courts are important and that they receive cases. It presumes that constitutional landmarks are based upon a liberal democratic conception of law. It presumes that courts offer reasons for their decisions. And it presumes that cases heard by the courts have meaning and legitimacy…

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Symposium: Constitutional Landmark Judgments in Asia

Symposium: Constitutional Landmark Judgments in Asia

Eleonora BOTTINI

One year ago, this Blog hosted the first symposium in a series, launching the ‘Constitutional Landmark Judgments Project’ with posts commenting on five landmark cases from jurisdictions in the Commonwealth…The journey around the world continues with a new symposium about Asian apex courts and their most remarkable judgments.

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Symposium: French Overseas Territories: Les résultats du 4 octobre 2020 sur la pleine souveraineté de la Nouvelle-Calédonie projettent une société divisée dans « le jour d’après »

Symposium: French Overseas Territories: Les résultats du 4 octobre 2020 sur la pleine souveraineté de la Nouvelle-Calédonie projettent une société divisée dans « le jour d’après »

Mathias CHAUCHAT

Il y a presque exactement deux ans, les électeurs de la Nouvelle-Calédonie, une collectivité française située dans l’océan Pacifique Sud qui compte 271,407 habitants (recensement 2019), avaient exprimé pour la première fois leur vote concernant la possibilité d’accéder à la pleine souveraineté. Le 4 novembre 2018, 56.40% des électeurs de la Nouvelle-Calédonie avaient voté Non et 43.60% Oui à l’indépendance (résultats définitifs ici).

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Symposium: French Overseas Territories: Situating New Caledonia Within French Republican Traditions

Symposium: French Overseas Territories: Situating New Caledonia Within French Republican Traditions

Eoin DALY

This post is about the constitutional background to New Caledonia’s unique status within France, and the location of this constitutional status within highly contested republican concepts and traditions. Specifically, I outline certain ways in which New Caledonia’s legislative autonomy is a departure from constitutional orthodoxies that are linked with France’s republican identity.

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Symposium: French Overseas Territories: One Island, Two Nations and a European Union: St. Martin

Symposium: French Overseas Territories: One Island, Two Nations and a European Union: St. Martin

Gerhard HOOGERS & Gohar KARAPETIAN

Named after the famous early Christian Saint Martin of Tours, on whose name day in 1493 Columbus reached the island, St. Martin is the smallest island in the world falling under the sovereignty of two different countries and the only place in the Caribbean under the sovereignty of two different EU Member States: France and the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

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Symposium: World-Wide France and (Colonial) EU Law Today

Symposium: World-Wide France and (Colonial) EU Law Today

Dimitry Vladimirovich KOCHENOV

The EU (or, back then, the European Economic Community (‘EEC’)) was designed with the goal of continued colonialism in mind. Indeed, the ‘the achievement of one of [Europe’s] essential tasks, namely, the development of the African continent’ was one of the two key goals of the Schuman declaration…

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Symposium: Introduction - Constitutionalism and Pluralism in Overseas France

Symposium: Introduction - Constitutionalism and Pluralism in Overseas France

Elisabeth ALBER

For this blog symposium, the IACL Blog editors asked contributors to reflect on the constitutional status of, and issues in, Overseas France…This request prompted reflection on the meaning and value of studying small (subnational) islands’ jurisdictions from the viewpoint of comparative constitutional law and beyond.

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Symposium: The Influence of the 1920 Austrian Constitution and Austrian Constitutional Thinking on Hungary

Symposium: The Influence of the 1920 Austrian Constitution and Austrian Constitutional Thinking on Hungary

Attila VINCZE, András JAKAB & Gábor SCHWEITZER

The birth of modern Austria also meant the dissolution of the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the end of a nearly 400 years long and very complicated relationship between these two countries. Even though they formed one empire, the two legal systems of Austria and Hungary have remained different and separate almost the entire time…

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Symposium: Spain and the 1920 Austrian Constitution

Symposium: Spain and the 1920 Austrian Constitution

Xabier ARZOZ

Nobody would deny the general influence of the 1920 Austrian Constitution on the 1931 Spanish Constitution (and, indirectly, on the 1978 Spanish Constitution). The reading of its text immediately suggests – and contemporaries have confirmed – that the 1931 Spanish Constitution broke with nineteenth century Spanish constitutionalism…

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