The book will be of interest to anyone researching the European Court of Justice. It provides the first encompassing normative framework to assess the development and state of the Court's procedures and decision-making. In university education it can be used at all levels and is particularly suited for interdisciplinary settings.
The book will be of interest to anyone researching the European Court of Justice. It provides the first encompassing normative framework to assess the development and state of the Court's procedures and decision-making. In university education it can be used at all levels and is particularly suited for interdisciplinary settings.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Christoph Krenn studied in Graz and Paris and received his Ph.D. in law from Goethe University Frankfurt. He is a research affiliate at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg, where he was also a research and senior research fellow from 2011 to 2019. In 2019 he was awarded an APART-GSK-Fellowship by the Austrian Academy of Sciences to pursue a four-year research project on the rise of constitutional adjudication in Austria and Switzerland. He has been a visiting scholar at University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, at iCourts Centre in Copenhagen and at University of Zurich.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. What courts do: a normative theory of court decision-making 3. On the template of the ICJ: the Court's liberal roots 4. Luhmann in Luxembourg: the rise of the rule of law model 5. Completing the transformation: proposals for democratising the ECJ 6. Conclusion.
1. Introduction 2. What courts do: a normative theory of court decision-making 3. On the template of the ICJ: the Court's liberal roots 4. Luhmann in Luxembourg: the rise of the rule of law model 5. Completing the transformation: proposals for democratising the ECJ 6. Conclusion.
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