Intersentia has just announced the publication of Monica Claes, Catherine Van de Heyning,
Maartje de Visser, and Patricia Popelier (eds.), Constitutional Conversations in Europe: Actors,Topics and Procedures (2012)
The relationship between
national constitutional courts and the European Court of Justice (CJEU) is
increasingly cast in terms of communication, understood as having a
constructive connotation, and as an alternative to the prior and more
destructive language of ‘guerre des juges’, conflict and revolt. This change in
approach fits in the transformation of the wider conceptual framework within
which the relationship between European and national legal orders is understood
and the rise of the ‘pluralist movement’. Judicial conversations between
national constitutional courts and the CJEU offer a unique object for academic
research on ‘constitutional pluralism’ and transnational relations in a new
world order.
This volume provides a
critical examination of the normative, empirical and contextual aspects of such
judicial conversations. It first addresses the appropriateness of conceiving as
conversations the interactions between the CJEU and constitutional courts. This
is followed by an exploration of the avenues for, and contents of, judicial
engagements between both sets of courts. Lastly, the book focuses on the
ordinary national courts and the European Court of Human Rights, as the other
main judicial interlocutors of the CJEU and constitutional courts, from a
conversational angle.
This book makes a valuable
contribution to the ongoing academic discourse on the relationship between the
CJEU and national constitutional courts by explaining their current attitudes
to transnational conversations and identifying potential catalysts for future
changes.
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