International Constitutional Law in Legal Education
Proceedings of the Erasmus Intensive Programme NICLAS 2007-2012- Editors:
- | | |
- Series:
- Schriften zum Internationalen und Vergleichenden Öffentlichen Recht, Volume 22
- Publisher:
- 26.03.2014
Summary
The NICLAS Summer School was built upon the International Constitutional Law Approach (ICL), which unifies the debates on the constitutionalization of International Law and the Internationalization of Constitutional Law with Comparative Constitutional Law. A broad understanding of constitutional law beyond the nation state open up the comparison of constitutional topics on the international, European and national level.
The summer school already initiated numerous publications, the book that is presented here is a final conclusion to this summer school project. It is a tour d’horizon through the different years and topics of the summer school. The contributions are written by summer school participants at various levels (teachers, students). The articles reflect the various topics and methodologies of the summer school as mentioned above and can also serve as examples for teaching materials for other summer schools, which deal with international constitutional law.
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Bibliographic data
- Publication year
- 2014
- Publication date
- 26.03.2014
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-1266-3
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7489-3066-2
- Publisher
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Series
- Schriften zum Internationalen und Vergleichenden Öffentlichen Recht
- Volume
- 22
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 328
- Product type
- Edited Book
Table of contents
- Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis No access Pages 1 - 10
- I. The Impact of Globalization in Constitutional Legal Education No access
- II. Learning by Doing – The NICLAS Summer School Experience No access
- III. Legal Didactics and Legal Research No access
- IV. Constitutional Comparison and the Internationalization of Legal Education No access
- V. Internationalization of Constitutional Law and Comparative Legal Education No access
- VI. The Impact of Legal Education on the Globalization of Constitutional Law No access
- I. The identification of comparative methods connected to different objectives No access
- II. The use of different comparative according to the expected objective No access
- I. The importance of comparative approaches No access
- II. Institutions No access
- III. Observations from the field No access
- IV. Outlook No access
- I. The Compensation of Nation State Failures as Europe’s Vocation No access
- II. The Case of Atomic Energy No access
- III. The ECI in Democratic Perspectives No access
- I. Introduction No access
- II. International legal framework on biodiversity No access
- III. Development of specific legal strategies No access
- V. Conclusion No access
- I. Introduction: less-nationals, not-quite-foreigners No access
- II. Nationality and Citizenship No access
- III. Nationality and State Sovereignty No access
- IV. Nationality and Human Rights No access
- V. Nationality, Nationalism and Minority Protection No access
- VI. Conclusions No access
- I. Introduction No access
- II. Citizenship rights vs. citizenship claims No access
- III. The ‘wills’ and ‘duties’ of citizenship No access
- IV. Citizenship, identity and conflict No access
- V. Conclusion No access
- I. Introduction No access
- II. Legal landscapes: an overview of national laws and policies No access
- III. The political and philosophical issues behind the scenes: a comparative analysis No access
- IV. Conclusive remarks No access
- I. Authority of the ECHR No access
- II. Deferring the enforcement of ECtHR judgments No access
- III. Comparison of conflicts between the ECtHR and state parties No access
- IV. The consequences of the Hungarian position: The erosion of the rule of the law No access
- I. Introduction: The Idea of Toleration and its impact on the Freedom of Religion as a basic Human Right No access
- II. “Toleration in books”: Toleration in the Enlightenment philosophy No access
- III. “Toleration in Action”: Toleration Policy in 18th Century Europe – the Examples of France and of Enlightened Absolutism in Austria No access
- IV. Comparison and Conclusions No access
- I. Economic and Monetary Union ruled by law No access
- II. Flouting of European fiscal rules No access
- III. Redemtion: Return to the rule of law No access
- IV. The rule of law and the democratic scope No access
- I. Introduction No access
- II. Bringing a libel action in England No access
- III. Defences to Libel in English Law No access
- IV. The Cost of Libel No access
- V. Concluding thoughts No access
- Editors and Contributors to this Volume No access Pages 325 - 328





