1st Edition
Constitutional Review in Central and Eastern Europe Judicial-Legislative Relations in Comparative Perspective
List of figures
List of tables
List of abbreviations
List of contributors
1. Constitutional review and judicial-legislative relations in new democracies, Kálmán Pócza – Márton Csapodi – Gábor Dobos – Attila Gyulai
2. The Croatian Constitutional Court: From a potentially powerful court to a court of rejections, Monika Glavina
3. The Czech Constitutional Court: The inconspicuous constrainer, Katarina Šipulová and Alžbeta Králová
4. The Estonian Supreme Court: strength by pragmatic collegiality, Paloma Krõõt Tupay
5. The Hungarian Constitutional Court: Dialogue in practice, Attila Gyulai – Gábor Dobos – Kálmán Pócza
6. The Latvian Constitutional Court: Dialogue and cooperation among constitutional bodies, Anita Rodiņa – Dita Plepa
7. The Lithuanian Constitutional Court: The gradual emergence of a strong guardian, Dovilė Pūraitė-Andrikienė
8. The Polish Constitutional Tribunal: Encountering Politics, Artur Wolek – Iga Jeziorska
9. The Romanian Constitutional Court: Layers of constitutional adjudication, Csongor Kuti
10. The Slovak Constitutional Court: The promise of Dworkinian adjudication?, Max Steuer – Erik Láštic
11. The Slovenian Constitutional Court: Courage in times of political instability, Polona Batagelj
12. Central and Eastern European constitutional courts in comparative perspective 1990-2020, Kálmán Pócza – Márton Csapodi – Gábor Dobos – Attila Gyulai
Biography
Kálmán Pócza is Senior Research Fellow at the Ludovika University of Public Service in Budapest, Research Institute for Politics and Government, and Head of the Center for Constitutional Politics at the Mathias Corvinus Collegium, Hungary. He is the Principal Investigator of the JUDICON-EU project.






