Constitution for a Disunited Nation : On Hungary's 2011 Fundamental Law.
- 1st ed.
- 1 online resource (588 pages)
Cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: From the 1989 Constitution to the 2011 Fundamental Law by Janos Kis -- I. LEGITIMACY -- What Is Democracy? (Ronald Dworkin) -- Regime Change, Revolution, and Legitimacy (Andrew Arato) -- Constitution-Making, Competition, and Cooperation (Zoltán Miklósi) -- II. HISTORY AND COMMUNITY -- A Sacred Symbol in a Secular Country: The Holy Crown (Sándor Radnóti) -- From "We the People" to "We the Nation" (Zsolt Körtvélyesi) -- III. HUMAN RIGHTS -- Human Dignity: Rhetoric, Protection, and Instrumentalisation (Catherine Dupré) -- Equality: The Missing Link (Kriszta Kovács) -- Freedom of Religion and Churches: Archeology in a Constitutionmaking Assembly (Renáta Uitz) -- IV. INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN -- From Separation of Powers to a Government without Checks: Hungary's Old and New Constitutions (Miklós Bánkuti, Gábor Halmai and Kim Lane Scheppele) -- Between Revolution and Constitution: The Roles of the Hungarian Constitutional Court (Oliver W. Lembcke, Christian Boulanger) -- Governance, Accountability, and the Market (Márton Varju) -- V. EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES -- No New(s), Good News? The Fundamental Law and the European Law (András Bragyova) -- Trees in the Wood: The Fundamental Law and the European Court of Human Rights (Jeremy McBride) -- VI. APPENDIX -- The Fundamental Law of Hungary -- Transitional Provisions of the Fundamental Law -- First Amendment of the Fundamental Law -- Bill on the Second Amendment of the Fundamental Law -- Opinion on the Fundamental Law of Hungary (Amicus Brief) Edited by Andrew Arato, Gábor Halmai and János Kis -- Opinion on the New Constitution of Hungary European Commission for Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission) -- Bibliography -- Table of Cases -- Contributors -- Index.
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