The CritQ provides a forum for open, interdisciplinary-oriented, intradisciplinary-informed critical jurisprudence grounded in the theory-praxis dialogue. As a European law journal the CritQ reflects the required legal adjustments towards societal, political, and systemic directives in Europe. The list of editors that counts the law schools of the University of Luxembourg and Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main among them, has been prominently enhanced with pioneers of European jurisdiction (Marc Jaeger, Vincent Lamanda, Dean Spielmann, Sir John Thomas, Andreas Voßkuhle). The European public is conveyed by language, thus the CritQ presents articles in German, English, and French.
The European Union is a supranational organization that has established and developed its own unique legal order, based on such a phenomenon as supranational law. This law brings together norms of international law, national legal traditions and,...
The article is devoted to the history of the development of the Ukrainian state, taking into account its European civilisational choice, which is determined by both geopolitical and cultural factors. It argues that Ukraine has always been an...
Walter Kargl, who celebrated his 80th birthday this year and to whom this article is dedicated, published a volume entitled “Beyond Constitutional Criminal Law” almost 20 years ago with the Institute for Criminal Sciences and Legal Philosophy in...
This article interrogates how Enlightenment legal thought shaped modern international law by naturalising racial capitalism under universal reason. It argues that John Locke, David Hume, and Adam Smith constructed a unified epistemic architecture...