Europeanization of judicial review / Nicola Ch. Corkin.
2015
KJC5053 .C67 2015 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Europeanization of judicial review / Nicola Ch. Corkin.
Published
New York ; London : Routledge, 2015.
Copyright
©2015
Call Number
KJC5053 .C67 2015
ISBN
0415713528 (hardback)
9780415713528 (hardback)
9781315883243 (ebk)
9780415713528 (hardback)
9781315883243 (ebk)
Description
xi, 212 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)866922773
Summary
"Europeanization of judicial review argues that the higher complexity of the political framework in which laws are made today leads to less well-designed laws and loopholes, allowing politicians to leave decisions to the courts. The higher complexity of the political framework is a result of the need in the European Union to consider both national and European legal and political rules when phrasing new laws. Both to decrease the complexity in the design of legislation and to preserve the ideal of the rule of law, the courts now are more likely to rule laws unconstitutional. The book employs a wide range of quantitative and qualitative methods to collect new data about the German, Austrian, and Italian Constitutional Courts over the last four decades. These three courts have a comparable history, theoretical background, and structure while differing in two key components: length of EU membership and legitimacy perception. Corkin employs multi-method research based on more than 50 interviews with judges, politicians, and civil servants; content analysis of abstract judicial review cases over three decades; and a database of more than 300 variables relating to the courts and their surroundings. Her data reveal that in abstract judicial review, and in the wider political arena, political culture has become more confrontational due to attitude changes in politicians and judges. These attitude changes can be directly linked to the EU and have wide-ranging implications for legitimacy, democracy, and political methodology"--Back cover.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-209) and index.
Series
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
List of Figures and Tables
ix
Introduction
1
1.
The Europeanization of Judicial Review
5
2.
Developments in Abstract Judicial Review 1980--2010
33
3.
Decisions and Decision Making
61
4.
Precedent, Black Letter, and Institutions---Influences on Decisions
90
5.
Institutions and Europeanization
166
6.
Two Stages of Europeanization
175
Bibliography
189
Index
211