Comparative Constitutionalism in Central Europe: Analysis on Certain Central and Eastern European Countries
Abstract
Chapters
-
Foreword
-
The Legacy of the Habsburg Empire in the Constitutional Traditions of Successor States
-
Croatian Constitutionalism from Autonomy to the State
-
From Monarchy to the Independent Czechoslovakia
-
The Constitutional Development of Hungary After 1918
-
(Im)permanence of Polish Constitutionalism: in Search of an Optimal Vision of the State
-
Romanian Constitutional Identity in Historical Context
-
The Influence of Serbia’s Historical Constitutions on its Modern Constitutional Identity– 30 Years Since the Return of Liberal Democratic Constitutionality –
-
The Constitutional Development of Slovakia
-
The Constitutional Development of Slovenia (1918 – 2021)
-
Constitution-making and the Permanence of the Constitution
-
Constitutional Values and Constitutional Identity in National Constitutions
-
The Separation of Powers
-
The System of Sources of Law
-
The Legislative Power273-292
-
The Executive Power
-
Presidents
-
The Constitutional Challenges of the Judiciary in the Post-socialist Legal Systems of Central and Eastern Europe
-
Constitutional Adjudication
-
Fundamental rights adjudication in the Central European region
-
National Minorities – Constitutional Status, Rights and Protection
-
Electoral Systems
-
Comparative Constitutionalism in Central Europe – Summary
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.

Downloads
Published
December 15, 2022
Copyright (c) 2022 Legal Studies on Central Europe
How to Cite
Csink, L. and Trócsányi, L. (eds.) (2022) Comparative Constitutionalism in Central Europe: Analysis on Certain Central and Eastern European Countries. Legal Studies on Central Europe. doi:10.54171/2022.lcslt.ccice.