Part I: Introduction.- Chapter 1. Revisiting the Role and Future
of National Constitutions in European and Global Governance:
Introduction to the Research Project.- Chapter 2. Questionnaire for
the Network of Constitutional Experts of the Research Project ‘The
Role of National Constitutions in European and Global Governance’.-
Part II. Political/Evolutionary Constitutions: The Predominant Role
of Parliament with the Absence of or a Weak Role for a
Constitutional Court, and a Generic or ECHR-Based Bill of Rights.-
Chapter 3. Europe’s Gift to the United Kingdom’s Unwritten
Constitution – Juridification.- Chapter 4. The Constitution of
Malta: Reflections on New Mechanisms for Synchrony of Values in
Different Levels of Governance.- Chapter 5. The Netherlands: The
Pragmatics of a Flexible, Europeanised Constitution.- Chapter 6.
The Constitution of Luxembourg in the Context of EU and
International Law as ‘Higher Law’.- Chapter 7. The Role of the
Danish Constitution in European and Transnational Governance.-
Chapter 8. The Constitution of Sweden and European Influences: The
Changing Balance between Democratic and Judicial Power.- Chapter 9.
Finland: European Integration and International Human Rights
Treaties as Sources of Domestic Constitutional Change and
Dynamism.- Part III: The Post-Totalitarian Constitutions of the
‘Old’ Member States: An Extensive Bill of Rights, Rule of Law
Safeguards and Constitutional Review by a Constitutional Court.-
Chapter 10. European Constitutionalism and the German Basic Law.-
Chapter 11. The Constitution of Italy: Axiological Continuity
between the Domestic and International Levels of Governance?.-
Chapter 12. The Constitution of Spain: The Challenges for the
Constitutional Order under European and Global Governance.- Chapter
13. Portugal: The Impact of European Integration and the Economic
Crisis on the Identity of the Constitution.- Chapter 14. The
Constitution of Greece: EU Membership Perspectives.- Part IV: The
Post-Totalitarian Constitutions of the ‘New’ Member States from the
Post-Communist Area: A Detailed Bill of Rights, Rule of Law
Safeguards and Constitutional Review Entrenched after the Recent
Memory of Arbitrary Exercise of Power.- Chapter 15. The Future
Mandate of the Constitution of Slovenia: A Potent Tradition Under
Strain.- Chapter 16. The Role of the Polish Constitution
(Pre-2016): Development of a Liberal Democracy in the European and
International Context.- Chapter 17. The Czech Republic: From a
Euro-Friendly Approach of the Constitutional Court to Proclaiming a
Court of Justice Judgment Ultra Vires.- Chapter 18. Slovakia:
Between Euro-Optimism and Euro-Concerns.- Chapter 19. The
Constitution of Estonia: The Unexpected Challenges of Unlimited
Primacy of EU Law.- Chapter 20. The Constitution of Latvia – A
Bridge Between Traditions and Modernity.- Chapter 21. The
Constitutional Experience of Lithuania in the Context of European
and Global Governance Challenges.- Chapter 22. Romania – The
Vagaries ofInternational Grafts on Unsettled Constitutions.-
Chapter 23. The Bulgarian Constitutional Order, Supranational
Constitutionalism and European Governance.- Chapter 24. The
Constitution of Croatia in the Perspective of European and Global
Governance.- Part V: Normative-Hybrid Constitutions: Combining
Strong and Elastic Elements, e.g. an Older or ECHR-Based Bill of
Rights.- Chapter 25. The Constitution of France in the Context of
EU and Transnational Law: An Ongoing Adjustment and Dialogue to be
Improved.- Chapter 26. The Belgian Constitution: The Efficacy
Approach to European and Global Governance.- Chapter 27. The
Constitution of Austria in International Constitutional Networks:
Pluralism, Dialogues and Diversity.- Chapter 28. Ireland: The
Constitution of Ireland and EU Law: The Complex Constitutional
Debates of a Small Country.- Chapter 29. The Cypriot Constitution
under the Impact of EU Law: An Asymmetrical Formation.- Part VI:
Specific Constitutional Developments.- Chapter 30. Introductory
Editorial Note to the Hungarian Report: The Pre-2010 Rule of Law
Achievements and Post-2010 Illiberal Turn.- Chapter 31. Hungary:
Constitutional (R)evolution or Regression?.- Part VII: Reforming
the National Constitution in View of Global Governance.- Chapter
32. Constitutionalisation and Democratisation of Foreign Affairs:
The Case of Switzerland.
Anneli Albi is Professor of European Law at the University of Kent, United Kingdom. Samo Bardutzky is Assistant Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.
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