Description du produit
- Catégories: Droit Constitutionnel et Institutionnel
- Editeur: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780198834335
- Date de publication: 06/12/2018
- Reliure : Broché
- Nombre de page : 192
Résumé
This book addresses the question of social constitutionalism, especially
with regard to its role in the contemporary European project. For
reasons of history and democracy, Europeans share a deep commitment to
social constitutionalism. But in the contemporary European
constitutional debate, constitutionalism and social democracy have
become antagonists, with the survival of the one seeming to require
sacrifice of the other. This book challenges the common view that
constitutionalization means de-politicization. It argues that courts can
exert a more indirect, creative, and agenda-setting role in the process
of an ongoing clarification of the meaning of a right. The CJEU and the
ECtHR - as courts beyond the nation state - are able to constructively
re-open and re-politicize controversies that may appear settled at the
national level in their constitutionalizing jurisprudence. And,
crucially, our understanding of shared European constitutional
principles is itself subject to revision and reconsideration as we
accumulate experiences of dealing with diverse national contexts.
By
examining the jurisprudence of the CJEU and the ECtHR, the book
demonstrates that in domain after domain, ranging from the protection of
the vulnerable in the European social market to the guarantee of
freedom of conscience, which in Europe emerged after many centuries of
religious persecution, both courts can enhance and deepen democracy and
thereby encourage the liberal project of constitutionalism beyond the
state. Over time, once interpretive answers have become established in
practice, courts can then move towards stronger forms of judicial
intervention that consolidate best practice. It is this democratic and
experimental process which lies at the heart of the distinctive model of
contemporary Euroconstitutionalism.
Table des matières
1: Non-Finality and Dialogue in Constitutional Interpretation: Towards
an Analytic Taxonomy of Non-Courtcentric Conceptions of Judicial Review
2: Adjudicating the European Social Market: Negative Constitutionalism Redux?
3: Democratic Experimentalism and the Public Sphere: Freedom of Conscience, Free Speech, and Non-Discrimination
4: Conclusion
Index