ISSN: 1474-2640, EISSN: 1474-2659
Published in association with the New York University School of Law, I•CON is dedicated to advancing the study of international and comparative constitutional law in the broadest sense of the terms.
I•CON recognizes that the boundaries between the disciplines of “constitutional law”, “administrative law”, “international law” and their comparative variants have become increasingly porous. So too, there is no longer a distinct divide between law and political science. I•CON scholarship reflects and values this intellectual cross-fertilization.
I•CON‘s interests include not only fields such as Administrative Law, Global Constitutional Law and Global Administrative Law, but also scholarship that reflects both legal reality and academic perception; scholarship which, in dealing with the challenges of public life and governance, combines elements from all of these fields with a good measure of political theory and social science.
Featuring scholarly articles by international and constitutional legal scholars, judges, and people from related fields, such as economics, philosophy and political science, I•CON offers critical analysis of current issues, debates and global trends that carry constitutional implications.
Editorial
Editorial: Germany v Italy: Jurisdictional immunities—Redux (and redux and redux); Ten good reads; I•CON thematic reading lists; Behind the scenes—Our Managing Editor; In this issue
Honor Roll of Reviewers 2021
Articles
The bound executive: Emergency powers during the pandemic
Tom Ginsburg, Mila Versteeg
Whither judicial dialogue after convergence? Finding transnational public law in nomos-building
Ming-Sung Kuo
Constructing a regional human rights legal order: The Inter-American Court, national courts, and judicial dialogue, 1988–2014
Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos, Wayne Sandholtz
Judicial dialogue on data retention laws: A breakthrough for European constitutional courts?
Jan Podkowik, Robert Rybski, Marek Zubik
Comparative law at the heart of immigration law: Criminal inadmissibility and conjugal immigration in Canada and the United States
Péter D Szigeti
Critical Review of Jurisprudence
The abortion jurisprudence in Brazil: An analysis of ADPF 54 from feminist equality-based perspectives
Taís Penteado
Symposium: Securing Cultural Heritage?
Securing cultural heritage? Understanding the law for our monuments, artworks, and archives today
Felicia Caponigri, Lorenzo Casini, Sabino Cassese
Nationalism versus “identity pluralism”? Preserving and valorizing archeological heritage
Elisa Bernard
Malleable monuments and comparative cultural property law: The Balbo monument between the United States and Italy
Felicia Caponigri
Filing the world: Archives as cultural heritage and the power of remembering
Agnese Ghezzi
Translating the concept of “cultural identity” in public policies: Between the international and the national, and the tangible and intangible dimension
Anna Pirri Valentini
Empirical Constitutional Scholarship: ICON: Debate!
Mind the gap: Analyzing the divergence between constitutional text and constitutional reality
Stefan Voigt
Empirical research in comparative constitutional law: The cool kid on the block or all smoke and mirrors?
Niels Petersen, Konstantin Chatziathanasiou
On disruption and leximetrics: A reply to Niels Petersen and Konstantin Chatziathanasiou
Zachary Elkins, Tom Ginsburg
Measurement and causal identification in constitutional law: A reply to Niels Petersen and Konstantin Chatziathanasiou
Adam Chilton, Mila Versteeg
On the seductions of quantification: A rejoinder
Niels Petersen, Konstantin Chatziathanasiou
I•CON: Debate!
Shifting meanings of fazhi and China’s journey toward socialist rule of law
Ruiping Ye
“Rule of law” with Chinese characteristics: Evolution and manipulation
Jerome A Cohen
The limited function of law in transforming rule of law: A reply to Ruiping Ye
Wen-Chen Chang
I•CON: Debate!
Judicial amendment of the constitution
Emmett Macfarlane
Judicial amendment and our constitutional lives: A reply to Emmett Macfarlane
Kate Glover Berger
There’s something about Brown: A reply to Emmett Macfarlane
Erin F Delaney, Christopher W Schmidt
Book Reviews
Maria Moscati, Review of Alice Margaria, The Construction of Fatherhood. The Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
Maria Moscati
Pierfrancesco Rossi, Review of Odile Ammann, Domestic Courts and the Interpretation of International Law: Methods and Reasoning Based on the Swiss Example
Pierfrancesco Rossi
Angelo Jr Golia, Review of Mariano Croce and Marco Goldoni, The Legacy of Pluralism: The Continental Jurisprudence of Santi Romano, Carl Schmitt, and Costantino Mortati
Angelo Jr Golia
Muhammad Zubair Abbasi, Review of Rachel M. Scott, Recasting Islamic Law: Religion and the Nation in Egyptian Constitution Making
Muhammad Zubair Abbasi
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