giovedì 22 maggio 2014

Our New Book: Kadi on Trial (Routledge)

Avbelj, Fontanelli, & Martinico: Kadi on Trial: A Multifaceted Analysis of the Kadi Trial
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415640312/

The judgment of the European Court of Justice concerning the Kadi case has raised substantive and procedural issues that have caught the attention of scholars from many disciplines including EU law, constitutional law, international law and jurisprudence. This book offers a comprehensive view of the Kadi case, and explores specific issues that are anticipated to resonate beyond the immediate case from which they derive.
The first part of the volume sets out an analysis of the new judgment of the Court, favouring a "contextual" reading of what is the latest link in a judicial chain. The following three parts offer interdisciplinary accounts of the decision of the European Court of Justice, including legal theory, constitutional law, and international law. The book closes with an epilogue by Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann, who studies the role of the Kadi case in the methodology of international law and its contribution to the concept of global justice.

EU Crisis and Constitutional Mutations: A Review Article


Giuseppe Martinico 


Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna di Pisa

May 21, 2014

STALS (Sant'Anna Legal Studies) Research Paper n. 3/2014 

Abstract:      
The aim of this article is to offer an overview of the relevant literature devoted to the constitutional implications of the European Union (EU) crisis. My analysis explores the main scholarly views on the mutations of the constitutional structure of the Union produced by the crisis. To this purpose I do not conceive “constitutional mutation” as a complete rupture from the past and in fact in this piece I shall try to stress both continuities and discontinuities with the traditional understanding of the EU constitutionalization process.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 28

Keywords: European Union, Crisis, European Economic Governance, Intergovernmentalism, Asymmetry, European Constitutional Law

The Need for a Methodological Framework for Comparative Legal Research: Sense and Nonsense of ‘Methodological Pluralism’ in Comparative Law


A. E. Oderkerk 


Centre for the Study of European Contract Law

April 8, 2014

Centre for the Study of European Contract Law Working Paper Series No. 2014-04
Amsterdam Law School Research Paper No. 2014-31 

Abstract:      
Contemporary comparative lawyers generally are in agreement that although a great variety of comparative legal research projects currently co-exist it is beyond the realm of possibility to develop a comprehensive and sophisticated method valid for all fields of the law and for all possible research aims and/or topics. This has lead to the idea that there is simply a ‘variety of methods’ for comparative researchers to choose from and the best method in a given context needs to be discovered in practice. This article argues that the mere existence of a variety of methods does not preclude the elaboration of a comprehensive methodology. In fact, the manner in which the idea of methodological pluralism is currently discussed can lead to eventual misunderstandings. Further, the argument is made that the idea can only be discussed usefully in relation to a (methodological) framework of comparative legal research valid for all fields of law, indicating which methods can be used within the appropriate part of the research-framework while pointing out according to which factors these choices should be determined. The article offers a first step in the direction of a comprehensive methodology of comparative legal research. It describes the framework that indicates various methodological issues that need to be dealt with in the various stages within a research project and points out the guidelines and principles that have already been elaborated upon by comparative legal methodologists for certain parts of the framework.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 40

Keywords: methodology, comparative legal research, methodological pluralism, comparative law, methodological framework

Constitutions in Authoritarian Regimes


Tom Ginsburg 


University of Chicago Law School

Alberto Simpser 


University of Chicago

April 22, 2014

Pp. 1-20 in Constitutions in Authoritarian Regimes, edited by Tom Ginsburg and Alberto Simpser (Cambridge University Press, 2014)
U of Chicago, Public Law Working Paper No. 468 

Abstract:      
Constitutions in authoritarian regimes are often denigrated as meaningless exercises in political theater. Yet the burgeoning literature on authoritarian regimes more broadly has produced a wealth of insights into particular institutions such as legislatures, courts and elections; into regime practices such as co-optation and repression; and into non-democratic sources of accountability. In this vein, this introduction to a new edited volume explores the form and function of constitutions in countries without the fully articulated institutions of limited government. The chapters in the book utilize a wide range of methods and focus on a broad set of cases, representing many different types of authoritarian regimes. The book offers an exploration into the constitutions of authoritarian regimes, generating broader insights into the study of constitutions and their functions more generally.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 35

The Italian Constitutional Court and Comparative Law: A Tale of Two Courts


Maurizia De Bellis 


University of Rome II

December 23, 2013

Abstract:      
Reference to foreign precedents by Constitutional Courts varies steadily across countries. Countries can be divided into two broad groups, a divide following closely the common/civil law divide. While in countries such as Australia, Canada, Ireland, Israel and South Africa, the use of foreign law is widespread, in the second group (comprising Austria, Germany, Hungary, Russia, as well Belgium, France and Spain), such use is much more rare. The few studies conducted about the Italian Constitutional Court suggest it falls without any doubt in the second group. But where exactly in the spectrum of possible types of «use» of comparative law?

The empirical research conducted in this survey suggests that the «much ado about nothing» approach adopted in the past to frame the use of foreign law by the Italian Constitutional Court must be questioned. On the one hand, the “explicit” reference to foreign law, albeit being still rare, has improved from a “quality” point of view: the most recent judgments referring to foreign law are often based on a broader legal reasoning than in the past and refer to some of the most relevant issues brought in front of the Court. On the other hand, there is a «second tale» - the one of the «hidden» influence of foreign law on the Italian Constitution - which has not been told yet. This survey tries to open this field of research, examining two sets of data from which one can infer such «underlying» influence: the cases in which foreign law is quoted by the parties, as an argument to persuade the Court, and the cases for which a specific Comparative Law Department established within the Court prepared comparative law dossiers.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 25

Keywords: judicial dialogue; transjudicial communication; judicial globalization; use of foreign precedents; Italian Constitutional Court

The Arab Spring's Four Seasons: International Protections and the Sovereignty Problem


Jillian Nicole Blake 


Independent

Aqsa Mahmud 


Independent

2014

Penn State Journal of Law & International Affairs, Vol. 3, No. 1, 2014 

Abstract:      
In December 2010, public demonstrations erupted throughout the Middle East against autocratic regimes, igniting a regional political transformation known as the Arab Spring. Depending on events, modern international criminal and humanitarian law provided certain protections to vulnerable populations. However, international law did not provide a uniform degree of protection to civilians and combatants who faced similar circumstances. This Article argues for a uniform standard of protections for all populations affected by armed conflict, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. It evaluates each of five major Arab Spring uprisings (Tunisia, Bahrain, Egypt, Syria, and Libya) and describes the legal protections that applied in each country’s revolution or rebellion. We analyze the differences in protection, focusing on the distinction between international and non-international armed conflicts under current international law, which affords a significantly lower degree of protection during civil conflicts. Given the substantial number of non-international armed conflicts in the modern era, we argue for a uniform standard of protections for all armed conflicts. Next, the Article shows that current sovereignty trends are moving away from the concept of an absolute sovereign in favor of a responsible sovereign who adheres to international standards. This trend is incompatible with current international law, which provides a minimal level of protection during civil war, and could therefore shield sovereigns from liability for mass atrocity crimes. Finally, this Article offers solutions to appropriately minimize outdated sovereignty norms and eliminate unjustified distinctions in the international legal system using lessons from the Arab Spring.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 56

Keywords: Arab Spring, Tunisia, Bahrain, Egypt, Syria, Libya

How Much Does EU Citizenship Cost? The Maltese Citizenship-for-Sale Affair: A Breakthrough for Sincere Cooperation in Citizenship of the Union?


Sergio Carrera 


Centre for European Policy Studies

April 25, 2014

Liberty and Security in Europe Paper No. 64 

Abstract:      
How much does European citizenship cost in the EU? This was the question that has raised so much controversy over the Maltese citizenship-for-sale programme. The outright selling of Maltese nationality to rich foreigners led to unprecedented responses by the European Parliament and European Commission. This paper examines the affair and its relevance for current and future configurations of citizenship of the EU. It studies the extent to which member states are still free to lay down the grounds for the acquisition and loss of nationality without any EU supervision and accountability. It provides a comparative overview of member state schemes and the exact price for buying citizenship and a residency permit in the EU. It is argued that the EU’s intervention on the Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair constitutes a legal precedent for assessing the lawfulness of passport-for-sale or golden migration programmes in other EU member states. The affair has also revealed the increasing relevance of a set of European and international legal principles limiting member states’ discretion over citizenship matters and providing a supranational constellation of accountability venues scrutinising the impact of their decisions over citizenship of the Union. The Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair has placed at the forefront the EU general principle of sincere cooperation in nationality matters. Member states’ actions in the citizenship domain cannot negatively affect in substance the concept and freedoms of European citizenship. That notwithstanding, the European institutions’ insistence on the need for Maltese nationality law to require a ‘genuine link’ in the form of an effective residence criteria for any rich applicants to benefit from the fast-track naturalisation poses a fundamental dilemma from the angle of Union citizenship: what is this genuine link really about? And what is precisely ‘habitual’, ‘effective’ or ‘functional’ residence? It is argued that by supporting the ‘real connections’ as the most relevant standard, the European institutions may be paradoxically fuelling nationalistic misuses by member states of the ‘genuine link’ as a way to justify restrictive integration policies on the acquisition of nationality.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 54

Keywords: European citizenship, EU, Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair

Pouvoir Constituant and Pouvoir Irritant in the Postnational Order


Nico Krisch 


Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats - ICREA; Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals - IBEI

April 28, 2014

Abstract:      
Constituent power is a key concept of the modern constitutional tradition, yet it encounters serious difficulties when transposed into today’s globalized world. Its radical promise sits uneasily with a social and political context that seems out of reach and impossible to ‘constitute’. Yet the idea of constituent power continues to animate people in their efforts to reclaim agency and self-government in a landscape shaped largely by others. This paper traces key challenges to the continuing force of constituent power, both in the domestic and the global contexts, and it offers an account in which constituent power in the postnational order survives only in part, as a mere irritant of existing institutional structures. This reduced role points to the limitations of a ‘global constitutionalism’ which is typically confined to providing liberal checks while marginalizing strong aspirations of self-government.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 21

Keywords: constitutionalism; constituent power; globalization; postnational law; global governance

Proportionality in Fundamental Rights Conflicts in National Measures Implementing EU Law


Pekka Savola 


University of Helsinki

April 30, 2014

Abstract:      
In this paper, proportionality and balancing of fundamental rights conflicts in national measures implementing EU law are examined. Different contexts of proportionality evaluation and fundamental rights are identified, with the focus on the aforementioned conflicts. A five-step procedure is submitted for evaluating proportionality. The procedure entails identifying the context and depth of evaluation, identifying different parties' interests, identifying the principles and national law, formulating the concrete criteria used in evaluation, and finally applying the criteria in proportionality test. The procedure is illustrated with examples of intellectual property rights enforcement using faultless third-party intermediaries and in particular website blocking orders.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 23

Keywords: proportionality, balancing, fundamental rights conflicts, IPR enforcement

The European Stability Mechanism through the Legal Meanderings of the Union's Constitutionalism: Comment on Pringle


Stanislas Adam 


Ghent University-Universiteit Gent

Francisco Javier Mena Parras 


Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) - Institute of European Studies; Free University of Brussels (VUB) - Research Group Fundamental Rights & Constitutionalism

May 4, 2014

(Draft version) European Law Review, 2013, 38 (6), pp. 848-865 

Abstract:      
In its judgment in Pringle, delivered on November 27, 2012, the Court of Justice of the European Union upheld the establishment of the European Stability Mechanism through the conclusion of an international agreement by Euro Area Member States. Beyond its implications for the Union’s economic and monetary policy, this landmark judgment offers food for thought on a series of central issues in EU constitutional law, including the scope of the simplified revision procedure in art. 48 (6) TEU or Member State co-operation and the use of EU institutions outside the EU legal order. It also constitutes a unique illustration of multi-level dialogue in the European Union in the post-Lisbon era.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 19

Keywords: Constitutionality, Economic and monetary policy, EU law, European Stability Mechanism, Ireland, Sovereign debt, Treaties, Validity


Proportionality and the Rule of Law: Rights, Justification, Reasoning


Grant Huscroft 


University of Western Ontario - Faculty of Law

Bradley W. Miller 


University of Western Ontario - Faculty of Law; James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, Princeton University

Grégoire Webber 


London School of Economics - Law Department

April 21, 2014

PROPORTIONALITY AND THE RULE OF LAW: RIGHTS, JUSTIFICATION, REASONING, Grant Huscroft, Bradley W. Miller, and Grégoire Webber, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2014 

Abstract:      
Proportionality has been received into the constitutional doctrine of courts in Continental Europe, the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, Israel, South Africa, and the United States, as well as the jurisprudence of treaty-based legal systems such as the European Convention on Human Rights.

Proportionality provides a common analytical framework for resolving the great moral and political questions confronting political communities. But behind the singular appeal to proportionality lurks a range of different understandings. This volume brings together many of the world's leading constitutional theorists – proponents and critics of proportionality – to debate the merits of proportionality, the nature of rights, the practice of judicial review, and moral and legal reasoning. Their essays provide important new perspectives on this leading doctrine in human rights law.

This is the Introduction to Proportionality and the Rule of Law: Rights, Justification, Reasoning, published by Cambridge University Press in April, 2014. In addition to the Introduction, this paper includes a list of contributors and a table of contents.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 27

Keywords: Constitutional theory, judicial review, proportionality, comparative constitutional law, constitutional rights, interpretation, rule of law,

Law and Development: 40 Years after Scholars in Self Estrangement - A Preliminary Review


David M. Trubek 


University of Wisconsin Law School

May 9, 2014

Univ. of Wisconsin Legal Studies Research Paper No. 1255 

Abstract:      
Noting that 2014 is the 40th anniversary of the publication of Scholars in Self-Estrangement, the author looks at the field of law and development during these four decades. In a preliminary report, he reviews the critique outlined in Scholars and the claim that its publication killed the field it was designed to save. While acknowledging that the field had lost momentum by 1980 he argues that the decline occurred not because of the article but because the field lost the support of development agencies before it could establish a secure place in the academy. Noting that the field revived in the late 1980s-early 1990s, he observes that conditions for law and development scholarship are much better today and there is a proliferation of research much of which has avoided errors pointed to in Scholars. This proliferation has enriched the field but at the price of fragmentation: the field has split into a number of “sub-disciplines” that do not always communicate with one another. The article scans the field in the 21st Century, noting the influence of new ideas about development which stress experimentation and local variation in policy. These, combined with a better understanding of the embeddness of local legal systems and the limits of legal transplants demands more attention to local context and variation. Looking to the future, the author concludes that if law and development is to produce useable knowledge the separate aspects of the field should be better integrated, more attention paid to local variation and context in law and policy, research capacity in the Global South enhanced, and North-South communication improved.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 33

Keywords: Law and Development, Transnational Law, Legal Education

Dysfunctional? Dissonant? Démodé? America’s Constitutional Woes in Comparative Perspective


Ran Hirschl 


University of Toronto - Faculty of Law

May 10, 2014

Boston University Law Review 94 (2014): 939-960 

Abstract:      
Much has been written in recent years about America’s political dysfunction, and whether it stems from, aided by or linked to systemic problems with the country’s constitutional order. In this article I place America’s constitutional shortcomings in a broader comparative context by considering them in light of four types of constitutional gridlock and dysfunction that are prevalent around the world. First, the “fundamental constitutional disharmony” scenario is characterized by discordant constitutional orders that disagree about the very definition and raison d’être of the polity as such, and fierce debate about sources of law and the form of government that result in an apparently oxymoronic constitutional framework (for example, Egypt, Israel, Pakistan, Malaysia, and Turkey). Second, the “synthetic constitution” scenario occurs where “artificial,” bi- or multi-ethnic polities live under a pragmatic, second-order, problem-solving, unprincipled constitutional mode that perpetually faces a realistic possibility of breakdown (for example, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and perhaps also the pan-European constitutional order). Third, the “opportunistic constitutional wars” scenario features frequent political struggles and strategic quarrels between rival self-interested elites that are disguised as principled constitutional disagreements, and may occasionally escalate into all-out constitutional wars (for example, constitutional battles between rival political elites in Romania or the Philippines, and challenges to fiscal federalism and reallocation of resources in oil- or mineral-rich federations such as Bolivia or Nigeria). Finally, the “inadequate constitution” scenario - this occurs where there are dated or otherwise deficient constitutional designs that impede effective government and that may yield derisory political outcomes (for example, Italy has had sixty-two governments over the last sixty-seven years; the population in Canada’s 308 federal electoral ridings varies from 35,000 to over 125,000 so that a vote in certain parts of the country is “worth” 3.5 times more than a vote in other parts). When viewed through this comparative prism, the U.S. constitutional order seems to suffer from the latter, serious yet relatively lighter two problems, but not from the former, more life-threatening two.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 22

Keywords: America, United States, constitution, comparative constitutionalism, constitutional dysfunction

New Economic Governance in the European Union: Another Constitutional Battleground?


Fabian Amtenbrink 


Erasmus University Rotterdam - Erasmus School of Law

May 15, 2014

FORTHCOMING in K. Purnhagen and P. Roth (Eds.), Varieties of European Economic Law and Regulation, Heidelberg, Dordrecht, London, New York, Springer, 2014. 

Abstract:      
The European financial and euro area debt crisis has exposed fundamental flaws of the system of economic governance in the euro area and namely of the legal framework introduced into primary Union law by the 1992/1993 Treaty on European Union governing economic policy coordination. This crisis has triggered a European regulatory response, the scope and swiftness of which is unprecedented in the 60 year history of European integration. These regulatory activities raise serious constitutional questions not only at the supranational, European level, but mainly also at the level of the Member States that fuel the long-standing debate on the relationship between the supranational legal order and the (constitutional) legal orders of the Member States. As the focus in the national sphere is increasingly on the impact of the European regulatory activities on core structural principles of the constitutional legal orders and namely the structural principle of parliamentary democracy, this debate has every potential to become even more entrenched. This could also put the much referred to co-operation and dialogue between the national highest (constitutional) courts and the Court of Justice of the European Union to the tested yet again. This contribution commences with a brief flashback to the beginnings of European economic and monetary union highlighting that the current judicial discourse on European economic governance and its democratic credentials is anything but new, as it finds its roots in the Treaty on the European Union. Thereafter, an overview of the new legal framework pertaining to economic policy coordination in the euro area and its impact on the national policy sphere is provided, followed by an analysis of a selection of decisions by national highest (constitutional) courts and tribunals, thereby focusing on their dealing with the constitutional impact of various aspects of the European regulatory response to the crisis. In the concluding part a preliminary answer to the question raised in the title of this contribution is offered.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 40

Keywords: EU, Euro zone, euro, European Stability Mechanism, debt crisis, economic governance, European Semester, Six Pack, Two Pack, Fiscal Compact, national courts, European Court of Justice, principle of democracy, democratic legitimaction, European Parliament, national parliaments

The Curious Case of Overfitting Legal Transplants


Mathias M. Siems 


Durham University - Durham Law School; University of Cambridge - Centre for Business Research

May 15, 2014

in Maurice Adams and Dirk Heirbaut (eds.), The Method and Culture of Comparative Law: Essays in Honour of Mark Van Hoecke, Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2014, pp. 133-146. 

Abstract:      
Sometimes cultural phenomena are more popular abroad than at home. For example, modern business cards arrived in Japan in the late 19th century but in today’s Japan they are considered more important than in Western countries. Similarly, and even more surprisingly, in Germany the US actor David Hasselhoff is considered as one of the greatest pop stars while his musical career has not been very successful in the US. This chapter suggests that a similar phenomenon may also exist in law. This is meant to refer to the situation that legal transplants may work even ‘better’ in the transplant than in the origin country, here called ‘overfitting legal transplants’. This suggestion departs from the current debate about legal transplants which holds that, at best, a transplant may work almost as good as in the origin country (and, at worst, it may be irrelevant, or even harmful to the transplant country). Thus, it is the main aim of this paper to relate the idea of overfitting legal transplants to the current discussion, to outline possible categories and examples, and to show how law-makers may be able to make use of them.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 15

Keywords: legal transplants, comparative law, law and society, law and culture, business cards, David Hasselhoff, Big in Japan

Towards Effective Regulatory Cooperation Under TTIP: A Comparative Overview of the EU and US Legislative and Regulatory Systems


Richard W. Parker 


University of Connecticut School of Law

Alberto Alemanno 


HEC Paris; NYU School of Law

May 15, 2014

European Commission, Brussels, May 2014 

Abstract:      
The aim of this independent report commissioned by the EU Commission is to inform the EU-US Transatlantic Trade and Investment negotiations on enhanced regulatory coherence and cooperation. It provides negotiators, stakeholders and the public with a comparative overview of the US and EU legislative and regulatory processes in their current form, highlighting differences and similarities. Special emphasis is placed on impact assessment/cost benefit analysis, stakeholder consultations and international regulatory cooperation.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 69

Keywords: TTIP, transatlantic regulatory cooperation, rulemaking, international trade, EU, US, regulatory convergence, regulatory coherence, regulatory compatibility, notice-and-comment, comitology, delegated acts, implementing acts, judicial review

On Policing Article 2 TEU Compliance – Reverse Solange and Systemic Infringements Analyzed


Dimitry Kochenov 


University of Groningen - Faculty of Law

May 17, 2014

XXXIII Polish Yearbook of International Law 2014, Forthcoming 

Abstract:      
At this stage of development of EU integration the problems emanating from the ‘crisis of values’ and the poor enforceability of Article 2 TEU have come to the fore in Hungary and elsewhere. The Union is apparently powerless to ensure that it is indeed composed of democratic states based on the rule of law as the Treaties state. The crucial issue for the successful development of EU law in this context is to find an efficient and expedient way to remedy this situation. While a number of scholarly proposals of how to do this has been tabled (besides the Commission’s own ‘pre-Article 7 procedure’ communication), two among them stand out. This paper provides a systemic critical analysis of the two, which most detailed and potentially far-reaching scholarly proposals currently available. The focus is on the ‘Reverse Solange’ proposal by Armin von Bogdandy et al. and on the ‘systemic infringement’ proposal by Kim Lane Scheppele. While both proposals for dealing with the crisis of the Rule of Law are of importance, as they provide valuable starting points in thinking about what to do at this troubling moment of EU integration history, neither of the two is likely to solve the crisis. Placing them in the context of numerous other options which are currently discussed is of key importance for solving the Union’s problems and bringing Hungary and eventual other deviant Member States back on track now and also in the future.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 37

Constitutional Islamization and Human Rights: The Surprising Origin and Spread of Islamic Supremacy in Constitutions


Dawood I. Ahmed 


University of Chicago - Law School

Tom Ginsburg 


University of Chicago Law School

May 20, 2014

Virginia Journal of International Law, Forthcoming
U of Chicago, Public Law Working Paper No. 477 

Abstract:      
The events of the Arab Spring and recent military coup in Egypt have highlighted the central importance of the constitutional treatment of Islam. Many constitutions in the Muslim world incorporate clauses that make Islamic law supreme or provide that laws repugnant to Islam will be void. The prevalence and impact of these “Islamic supremacy clauses” is of immense importance for constitutional design — not just for Muslim countries but also for U.S. foreign policy in the region, which became engaged in the issue during constitution-writing in Afghanistan and Iraq. However, to date, there has been no systematic or empirical examination of these clauses. Many questions remain unexplored: Where did these clauses originate? How have they spread? Are they anti-democratic impositions? What determines their adoption in national constitutions?

This Article fills this gap. Relying on an original dataset based on the coding of all national constitutions since 1789 and case studies from four countries — Iran, Afghanistan, Egypt and Iraq — it traces the origin and adoption of Islamic supremacy clauses since their first appearance in Iran in 1907. We make three major, counterintuitive claims: First, we argue that the repugnancy clause — the most robust form of Islamic supremacy clause — has its origins in British colonial law, and indeed, that all forms of Islamic supremacy are more prevalent in former British colonies than in other states in the region. Second, we argue that in many cases, these clauses are not only popularly demanded, but are also first introduced into their respective jurisdictions during moments of liberalization and modernization. Third, contrary to the claims of those who assume that the constitutional incorporation of Islam will be antithetical to human rights, we demonstrate that almost every instance of “Constitutional Islamization” is accompanied by an expansion, and not a reduction, in the rights provided by the constitution. Indeed, constitutions which incorporate Islamic supremacy clauses are even more rights-heavy than constitutions of other Muslim countries which do not incorporate these clauses. We explain the incidence of this surprising relationship using the logic of coalitional politics.

These findings have significant normative implications. On a broader level, our work supports the view of scholars who argue that the constitutional incorporation of Islam is not only compatible with the constitutional incorporation of basic principles of liberal democracy, but that more democracy in the Muslim world may mean more Islam in the public sphere; in fact, we find that more democratic countries are not necessarily any less likely to adopt Islamic supremacy clauses. Our findings also suggest that outsiders monitoring constitution-making in majority Muslim countries who argue for the exclusion of Islamic clauses are focused on a straw man; not only are these clauses popular, but they are nearly always accompanied by a set of rights provisions that could advance basic values of liberal democracy. We accordingly suggest that constitutional advisors should focus more attention on the basic political structures of the constitution, including the design of constitutional courts and other bodies that will engage in interpretation, than on the Islamic provisions themselves.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 87

lunedì 5 maggio 2014





Dear friends and colleagues,

we are pleased to announce the contents of this STALS newsletter.

STALS Papers

Gianluigi Palombella, “Quo isti Europa? Relative Movement and the Lens of
Transformation”
STALS Research Paper N. 2/2014
http://www.stals.sssup.it/files/palombella%202%202014.pdf

Giuseppe Martinico, “EU Crisis and Constitutional Mutations: A Review
Article”
STALS Research Paper N. 3/2014”
http://www.stals.sssup.it/files/martinico%20crisis.pdf

STALS Events

15 May 2014
11.00 -13.00 (saletta riunioni 6)
"Constitutional Reasoning" e Corte di giustizia dell'Unione europea
http://stals.sssup.it/files/itzcovich.pdf

16 May 2014
16.00-18.00 (saletta riunioni 6)
Fact-Finding before the International Court of Justice: How to Restyle the

Respected Old Lady
http://stals.sssup.it/files/devaney.pdf


SSSUP Events

14 May 2014
11.00-13.30 (aula 6)

Cittadino e opinione pubblica in Europa: un dibattito
http://stals.sssup.it/sssup-events

All the best from Pisa,

the Editors

domenica 4 maggio 2014

How Much Does EU Citizenship Cost? The Maltese Citizenship-for-Sale Affair: A Breakthrough for Sincere Cooperation in Citizenship of the Union?


Sergio Carrera 


Centre for European Policy Studies 

April 25, 2014

Liberty and Security in Europe Paper No. 64 

Abstract:      
How much does European citizenship cost in the EU? This was the question that has raised so much controversy over the Maltese citizenship-for-sale programme. The outright selling of Maltese nationality to rich foreigners led to unprecedented responses by the European Parliament and European Commission. This paper examines the affair and its relevance for current and future configurations of citizenship of the EU. It studies the extent to which member states are still free to lay down the grounds for the acquisition and loss of nationality without any EUsupervision and accountability. It provides a comparative overview of member state schemes and the exact price for buying citizenship and a residency permit in the EU. It is argued that the EU’s intervention on the Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair constitutes a legal precedent for assessing the lawfulness of passport-for-sale or golden migration programmes in other EU member states. The affair has also revealed the increasing relevance of a set of European and international legal principles limiting member states’ discretion over citizenship matters and providing a supranational constellation of accountability venues scrutinising the impact of their decisions over citizenship of the Union. The Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair has placed at the forefront the EU general principle of sincere cooperation in nationality matters. Member states’ actions in the citizenship domain cannot negatively affect in substance the concept and freedoms of European citizenship. That notwithstanding, the European institutions’ insistence on the need for Maltese nationality law to require a ‘genuine link’ in the form of an effective residence criteria for any rich applicants to benefit from the fast-track naturalisation poses a fundamental dilemma from the angle of Union citizenship: what is this genuine link really about? And what is precisely ‘habitual’, ‘effective’ or ‘functional’ residence? It is argued that by supporting the ‘real connections’ as the most relevant standard, the European institutions may be paradoxically fuelling nationalistic misuses by member states of the ‘genuine link’ as a way to justify restrictive integration policies on the acquisition of nationality.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 54

Keywords: European citizenship, EU, Maltese citizenship-for-sale affair

BRICS Parma launches a CALL FOR PAPERS for the Conference "BRICS IN THE SPOTLIGHT. AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH"

This an interesting call for paper on "BRICS" that has been launched by the University of Parma https://twitter.com/BRICSparma/status/462207735191191553/photo/1

giovedì 1 maggio 2014

Use of Dedicated Meta-Search Engine Infringes Database Right: The CJEU's Stance in Innoweb v. Wegener


Enrico Bonadio 


City University London - The City Law School

Angelo Maria Rovati 


University of Pavia

April 2014

Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice, April (2014) 

Abstract:      
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) released an important decision concerning the sui generis right under Article 7 of the Directive 96/9 on the legal protection of databases. The court held that an internet operator that provides a dedicated meta-search engine (which in turn uses search engines provided by other websites to retrieve results) re-uses the whole or a substantial part of the contents of a database and therefore commits infringement, if such engine: (i) provides the end user with a search form which substantially has the same functionality as the search form on the target website; (ii) enables a search of the whole database in the target website and (iii) presents the elaborated results in a way which is comparable to that of the target website.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 2

Keywords: Intellectual property, database right, copyright