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 Federal Constitutional Court is repeatedly faced with a dilemma when dealing with the fundamental rights of the constitution. The limits or boundaries of important fundamental rights are undefined or not regulated at all and must therefore be...
Immanuel Kant's birthday was 300 years ago recently. His essay 'On Perpetual Peace' (Reclam 2014) can be understood as a frame of reference and an early wise warning against (currently misguided) globalisation, which he mockingly referred to as...
The article illustrates the course of social and legal transformation processes using the example of the regulation of the state's use of AI video surveillance. At an abstract level, it shows the multiple connections and interactions between...
The paper aims to supplement the predominantly functional arguments for lawmaker’s margins of appreciation within constitutional rights proportionality with an argument from legal theory. It holds that it is the analytical (or logical) evidence of...