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 cooperative club to generate benefits for all member states. In order to do justice to the different preferences of the members, the EU was only given specific and unanimously decided competences. After the welfare economist...
The article is a – detailed – review of the legal habilitation thesis by Benjamin Lahusen: “the service is not disturbed“ - "The Germans and their Justice 1943 – 1945". Starting from the thesis of a service that was not disturbed even by...
The following article was written as part of the cooperation between the law faculties in Luxembourg and Vientiane. It is part of a cooperation policy project on the implementation of rule of law principles in countries of the Global South. The...
According to Norbert Elias, the decline of formerly great nations leads to a serious crisis of meaning and identity for the affected peoples and their elites. If they seek refuge in war, it is not out of reprehensible motives, but in need of...