Category: Editorial
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Je Suis Achbita! (I·CON Volume 15, Issue 4: Editorial)
—J.H.H. Weiler, University Professor, European Union Jean Monnet Chair, New York University Law School; Co-Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Constitutional Law Editorial: Je Suis Achbita! Achbita, decided in March 2017 is not a run of the mill case. It raised what I think are hugely difficult conceptual legal issues.
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ICON’s Current Issue (Table of Contents)
Volume 15 Issue 4 Table of Contents Editorial Honor Roll of Reviewers 2017 Articles Jessica Eisen, Animals in the constitutional state William Partlett, The American tradition of constituent power Rosalind Dixon and Tom Ginsburg, The forms and limits of constitutions as political insurance Elisa D’Alterio, Integrity of the public sector and controls: A new challenge…
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Special Announcement: I-CONnect Columnists for 2018
—David Landau, Florida State University College of Law The editors of I-CONnect are pleased to announce our new slate of columnists for 2018: Jaclyn Neo, James Fowkes, Francisca Pou Giménez, and Renata Uitz. We are confident that they will provide a diverse and fascinating set of voices, representing a range of regional and substantive areas…
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Public Law in Crisis? (I·CON Volume 15, Issue 3: Editorial)
We invited Sabino Cassese, member of the I.CON Board of Editors, to write a Guest Editorial. Public law in crisis? Developments in the last century Public law has greatly changed in the last century. It has lost several elements: the guidance from Roman law (Section 1.1); the compass of sovereignty (Section 1.2); its exclusively nationalistic…
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ICON’s Current Issue (Table of Contents)
Volume 15 Issue 3 Table of Contents Editorial In Memoriam: Norman Dorsen (1930-2017) I.CONic Interview Ruth Rubio Marin and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, “Notorious RBG”: A conversation with United States Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Articles Toni Marzal, From Hercules to Pareto: of bathos, proportionality and EU law Neil Duxbury, Judicial disapproval as a constitutional…
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Cooperative Brexit: Giving Back Control Over Trade Policy (I·CON Volume 15, Issue 2: Editorial)
We invited Thomas Streinz,* Fellow at the Institute for International Law and Justice, NYU School of Law, to contribute a Guest Editorial to our Journal. Taking Joseph Weiler’s recent Editorial, “The Case for a Kinder, Gentler Brexit”, as its starting point, Mr Streinz argues that the principle of “sincere cooperation” requires the Union and a…
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ICON’s Current Issue (Table of Contents)
Volume 15 Issue 2 Table of Contents Editorial Introduction Rodrigo Álvarez. The times they are a-changin’ . . .: Challenges in Latin America Articles Daniel Brinks and Abby Blass, Rethinking judicial empowerment: The new foundations of constitutional justice Juliano Zaiden Benvindo, The forgotten people in Brazilian constitutionalism: Revisiting strategic behavior analyses of regime transitions Symposium:…
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I·CON Volume 15, Issue 1: Editorial
—J.H.H. Weiler, University Professor, European Union Jean Monnet Chair, New York University Law School; Co-Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Constitutional Law Editorial: The Case for a Kinder, Gentler Brexit [Editor’s Note: The editorial was previously posted and can be found here.] 10 Good Reads [Editor’s Note: J.H.H
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ICON’s Current Issue (Table of Contents)
I·CON Volume 15 Issue 1 Table of Contents Editorial I.CON Focus: Between International and Constitutional Law Oddný Mjöll Arnardóttir, The “procedural turn” under the European Convention on Human Rights and presumptions of Convention compliance Eyal Benvenisti & Alon Harel, Embracing the tension between national and international human rights law: The case for discordant parity Gregory…
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The Case for a Kinder, Gentler Brexit
—J.H.H. Weiler, University Professor, European Union Jean Monnet Chair, New York University Law School; Co-Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Constitutional Law Of course, we know better than to be shooting at each other; but the post-June 23 relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union is woefully bellicose, and increasingly so.