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
Articles
Against settlement before the European Court of Human Rights
Veronika Fikfak
Calibrating the response to populism at the European Court of Human Rights
Alain Zysset
Taking global administrative law one step ahead: Online giants and the digital democratic sphere
Orit Fischman-Afori
The CJEU and EU (de-)constitutionalization: Unpacking jurisprudential responses
Carolyn Moser, Berthold Rittberger
Revolutionary amnesia and the nature of prerogative power
David Kershaw
Constraining constituent conventions: Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès and the limits of pouvoir constituant
Raffael N Fasel
What is constitutional interpretation?
Gonçalo de Almeida Ribeiro
A core case for supermajority rules in constitutional adjudication
Cristóbal Caviedes
Special Section: Small States
Antidefection laws in three small South Pacific parliaments: A cautionary tale
Caroline Morris
Variables shaping participatory constitution-making: Insights from the experiences of small states
Maartje De Visser, Elisabeth Perham
Critical Review of Jurisprudence
Microcontextual considerations in ouster clause analysis: A comparative study of parallel trends in the United Kingdom and Singapore
Kenny Chng
Symposium: Academic Stories of Covid-19 and Its Unequal Impacts
Introduction to the Symposium: Academic stories of Covid-19 and its unequal impacts
Gráinne de Búrca, Dana Schmalz
Between predictability and perplexity
Marcela Prieto Rudolphy
Constitutionalizing care: How can we expand our constitutional imaginary after Covid-19?
Jaclyn L Neo
“Un-disabled by Covid”: Reflections of a (usually disabled) socio-legal scholar
Clare Williams
When everyday-life troubles get even bigger: Being a young woman with a disability during Covid times
Ada Fama
Assessing the impact of Covid-19 on teaching and research: A Ghanaian perspective
Gertrude Amorkor Amarh
The thin line between farce and tragedy: My Covid story between Italy and Guatemala
Lorenzo Gasbarri
Speaking truth to power: Legal scholars as survivors and witnesses of the Covid-19 maternal mortality in Brazil
Gabriela Rondon, Debora Diniz, Juliano Zaiden Benvindo
My Covid-19 story: A tale of convergence, divergence, and more than law
Pedi Obani
Between two worlds: Personal reflections from Slovenia and Spain on the Covid-19 pandemic
Jernej Letnar Černič
When the personal becomes political: Rethinking legal fatherhood
Alice Margaria
Book Reviews
Benedetta Barbisan, Review of Diletta Tega, La Corte nel contesto. Percorsi di ri-accentramento della giustizia costituzionale in Italia
Benedetta Barbisan
Ondřej Kadlec, Review of Cristina E. Parau, Transnational Networking and Elite Self-Empowerment: The Making of the Judiciary in Contemporary Europe and Beyond
Ondřej Kadlec
Marten Zwanenburg, Review of Amichai Cohen and David Zlotogorski, Proportionality in International Humanitarian Law: Consequences, Precautions, and Procedures
Marten Zwanenburg
Margaret K. Lewis, Review of Weitseng Chen & Hualing Fu (eds)., Authoritarian Legality in Asia: Formation, Development and Transition
Margaret K Lewis
Brendan Edgeworth, Review of Rachael Walsh, Property Rights and Social Justice: Progressive Property in Action
Brendan Edgeworth
Tom Gerald Daly, Review of Mark Tushnet, The New Fourth Branch: Institutions for Protecting Constitutional Democracy
Tom Gerald Daly
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