Rule of Law, Human Rights and Judicial Control of Power
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portes grátis
Rule of Law, Human Rights and Judicial Control of Power
Some Reflections from National and International Law
Martinez-Estay, Jose Ignacio; Arnold, Rainer
Springer International Publishing AG
05/2017
446
Dura
Inglês
9783319551845
15 a 20 dias
852
Descrição não disponível.
Part I: Rule of Law and Judicial Control of Power.- Chapter 1. Constitution and Judicial Review: Comparative Analysis.- Chapter 2. On the Jurisdictional Control of Acts of the Goverment of Romania.- Chapter 3. Judicial Control of Public Power in Poland.- Chapter 4. To Be, or Not to Be, That Is the Question. The Process of Unconstitutionality Like an Abstract Judicial Review at the Peruvian Constitution.- Chapter 5. Judicial Review and Public Power in Kenya: Revisiting Judicial Response to Select Political Cases.- Chapter 6. Direct Participation of the People in Public Power - Advantages and Disadvantages of a Referendum, Croatian and European Perspective.- Chapter 7. The Role of Civil Society in the Control of Public Power.- Chapter 8. Basic Features of the Constitutional System in Kosovo.- Chapter 9. Role of the Constitutional Justice in Controlling the Balance between State Powers in the Republic of Moldova.- Chapter 10. Judicial Control of Public Power as Legal Instrument for Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in Ukraine.- Part II: Judicial Control, Its Effects and Limits.- Chapter 11. Respect for Judicial Precedent as a Limit on the Exercise of Public Power.- Chapter 12. Reception of the Proportionality Test by Chilean Scholars: A Critical Analysis.- Chapter 13. Constitutional Tribunals' Judicial Control of Public Power in Poland.- Chapter 14. The Margin of Appreciation of the Albanian Constitutional Court on the Constitutionality of Emergency Decrees of Executive Power.- Chapter 15. The Project of Constitutional Reform in Austria.- Part III: Human Rights and Judicial Control.- Chapter 16. Consensus and the Intensity of Judicial Review in the European Court of Human Rights.- Chapter 17. The Jurisdiction on the Social Rights: A Conflict between the Courts and Public Power in the Italian Legal System.- Chapter 18. Depreciation of State Sovereignty at the Turn of the 21st Century.- Chapter 19. The International Criminal Court as an International Judicial Control of the National Public Power? (The ICC's Standpoint on the Complementarity Principle in the Prosecutor v. Simone Gbagbo Case).- Chapter 20. Judicial Review of EU Legislation as an Instrument to Ensure Constistency of National and EU Law.- Chapter 21. The Relationship Between Positive Obligations of Incrimination Under the ECHR and the Constitutional Principle of Legality in Criminal Matters in the Italian Legal System.- Chapter 22. Role of the European Court of Human Rights in the Turkish Constitutional Court's Rulings Regarding the Freedom of Association.- Chapter 23. Beyond the Judicial Control of Public Power: The Horizontal Effects of Human Rights in Chile.
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Constitutional or Supreme Courts;Control of Power by Administrative Justice;Control of Power by Constitutional Justice;Control of Power on the Regional Level;Control of Power on Universal International Level;Deference and Margin of Appreciation;Impact on Public on Civil Law;Importance of Power Control for Democracy;Judicial Review and Its Limits;Jurisdictional Control in General;Jurisdictional Instruments;Legal Control of Public Power;Legality of Administrative Action;Modern Constitutionalism;Non-judicial Bodies;Non-jurisdictional Legal Control;Rule of Law;Separation of Powers and Sovereignty;Supreme Court Systems;Theory of State
Part I: Rule of Law and Judicial Control of Power.- Chapter 1. Constitution and Judicial Review: Comparative Analysis.- Chapter 2. On the Jurisdictional Control of Acts of the Goverment of Romania.- Chapter 3. Judicial Control of Public Power in Poland.- Chapter 4. To Be, or Not to Be, That Is the Question. The Process of Unconstitutionality Like an Abstract Judicial Review at the Peruvian Constitution.- Chapter 5. Judicial Review and Public Power in Kenya: Revisiting Judicial Response to Select Political Cases.- Chapter 6. Direct Participation of the People in Public Power - Advantages and Disadvantages of a Referendum, Croatian and European Perspective.- Chapter 7. The Role of Civil Society in the Control of Public Power.- Chapter 8. Basic Features of the Constitutional System in Kosovo.- Chapter 9. Role of the Constitutional Justice in Controlling the Balance between State Powers in the Republic of Moldova.- Chapter 10. Judicial Control of Public Power as Legal Instrument for Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in Ukraine.- Part II: Judicial Control, Its Effects and Limits.- Chapter 11. Respect for Judicial Precedent as a Limit on the Exercise of Public Power.- Chapter 12. Reception of the Proportionality Test by Chilean Scholars: A Critical Analysis.- Chapter 13. Constitutional Tribunals' Judicial Control of Public Power in Poland.- Chapter 14. The Margin of Appreciation of the Albanian Constitutional Court on the Constitutionality of Emergency Decrees of Executive Power.- Chapter 15. The Project of Constitutional Reform in Austria.- Part III: Human Rights and Judicial Control.- Chapter 16. Consensus and the Intensity of Judicial Review in the European Court of Human Rights.- Chapter 17. The Jurisdiction on the Social Rights: A Conflict between the Courts and Public Power in the Italian Legal System.- Chapter 18. Depreciation of State Sovereignty at the Turn of the 21st Century.- Chapter 19. The International Criminal Court as an International Judicial Control of the National Public Power? (The ICC's Standpoint on the Complementarity Principle in the Prosecutor v. Simone Gbagbo Case).- Chapter 20. Judicial Review of EU Legislation as an Instrument to Ensure Constistency of National and EU Law.- Chapter 21. The Relationship Between Positive Obligations of Incrimination Under the ECHR and the Constitutional Principle of Legality in Criminal Matters in the Italian Legal System.- Chapter 22. Role of the European Court of Human Rights in the Turkish Constitutional Court's Rulings Regarding the Freedom of Association.- Chapter 23. Beyond the Judicial Control of Public Power: The Horizontal Effects of Human Rights in Chile.
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Constitutional or Supreme Courts;Control of Power by Administrative Justice;Control of Power by Constitutional Justice;Control of Power on the Regional Level;Control of Power on Universal International Level;Deference and Margin of Appreciation;Impact on Public on Civil Law;Importance of Power Control for Democracy;Judicial Review and Its Limits;Jurisdictional Control in General;Jurisdictional Instruments;Legal Control of Public Power;Legality of Administrative Action;Modern Constitutionalism;Non-judicial Bodies;Non-jurisdictional Legal Control;Rule of Law;Separation of Powers and Sovereignty;Supreme Court Systems;Theory of State