Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 380 Seiten, Hardback, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 975 g
Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 380 Seiten, Hardback, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 975 g
Reihe: Hart Studies in Comparative Pu
ISBN: 978-1-84946-271-6
Verlag: HART PUB
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction. The Methodology of the Research: How to Assess the Reality of Transjudicial Communication?
Tania Groppi and Marie-Claire Ponthoreau
Part I
1. Reference to Foreign Precedents by the Australian High Court: A Matter of Method
Cheryl Saunders and Adrienne Stone
2. Canada: Protecting Rights in a 'Worldwide Rights Culture'. An Empirical Study of the Use of Foreign Precedents by the Supreme Court of Canada (1982-2010)
Gianluca Gentili
3. India: A 'Critical' Use of Foreign Precedents in Constitutional Adjudication
Valentina Rita Scotti
4. The Supreme Court of Ireland and the Use of Foreign Precedents: The Value of Constitutional History
Cristina Fasone
5. Israel: Creating a Constitution-The Use of Foreign Precedents by the Supreme Court (1994-2010)
Suzie Navot
6. Namibia: The Supreme Court as a Foreign Law Importer
Irene Spigno
7. South Africa: Teaching an 'Old Dog' New Tricks? An Empirical Study
of the Use of Foreign Precedents by the South African Constitutional Court (1995-2010)
Christa Rautenbach
Part II
8. Austria: Non-cosmopolitan, but Europe-friendly-The Constitutional Court's Comparative Approach
Anna Gamper
vi Contents
9. Lifting the Constitutional Curtain? The Use of Foreign Precedent by the German Federal Constitutional Court
Stefan Martini
10. Hungary: Unsystematic and Incoherent Borrowing of Law. The Use of Foreign Judicial Precedents in the Jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court, 1999-2010
Zoltán Szente
11. A Gap between the Apparent and Hidden Attitudes of the Supreme Court of Japan towards Foreign Precedents
Akiko Ejima
12. Mexico: Struggling for an Open View In Constitutional Adjudication
Eduardo Ferrer Mac-Gregor and Rubén Sánchez Gil
13. Romania: Analogical Reasoning as a Dialectical Instrument
Elena Simina Tanasescu and Stefan Deaconu
14. Russia: Foreign Transplants in the Russian Constitution and Invisible Foreign Precedents in Decisions of the Russian Constitutional Court
Sergey Belov
15. Judges as Discursive Agent: The Use of Foreign Precedents by the Constitutional Court of Taiwan
Wen-Chen Chang and Jiunn-Rong Yeh
16. United States of America: First Cautious Attempts of Judicial Use of Foreign Precedents in the Supreme Court's Jurisprudence
Angioletta Sperti
Conclusion. The Use of Foreign Precedents by Constitutional Judges: A Limited Practice, An Uncertain Future
Tania Groppi and Marie-Claire Ponthoreau