02422 2200265 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001400123084002000137100002300157245010700180260004900287300003300336520158200369650005101951650003602002700001802038990002502056990002502081990002502106990002502131INLIS00000000000936320221109085025 a0010-0520009363221109 | | eng  a9780472109654 aeng a347.43902 a347.43902 SOL c0 aSolyom, La´szlo´1 aConstitutional Judiciary In a New Democracy: The Hungarian Constitutional Court /cLa´szlo´ So´lyom aAnn Arbor, Michigan :bMichigan Press,c2000 ax, 417 p. ; 24 cm. ;c24 cm. aTwo in-depth essays and a selection of twenty-seven of the most important decisions present the Hungarian Constitutional Court as one of the most important actors of the transition into democracy in a post-communist country. How was it possible that a new Court established in 1990, in a country just released from forty years of Communist rule, was able to enforce a Constitution, maintain the rule of law, and protect the freedom of its citizens in a way comparable to the U.S. Supreme Court? This new Court has issued decisions on topics ranging from the establishment of democracy and a market economy--privatization, compensation for the nationalization of property, and retroactive criminal legislation--as well as such issues as the constitutionality of capital punishment, abortion, freedom of speech and the media, and the separation of powers. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer provides the foreword and introduces the two essays that begin the book. In the first essay, Georg Brunner explains how the Court was set up and what its procedures are. In the second, Lázszló Sólyom describes systematically the emergence of the case-law of the Court and its jurisprudence on constitutional rights and on the powers and procedures of the other branches of government. The models followed by the Court are outlined, and its contribution to global constitutionalism explored. Lázszló Sólyom is President of the Constitutional Court of Hungary and Professor of Law, ELTE University of Budapest. Georg Brunner is Professor of Law, University of Cologne, Germany. 4aHungary; Constitutional law --Hungary --Cases 4aConstitutional courts --Hungary0 aGeorg Brunner a22558/MKRI-P/XI-2011 a22559/MKRI-P/XI-2011 a22558/MKRI-P/XI-2011 a22559/MKRI-P/XI-2011