Administrative / Constitutional Law Law Business, Regulatory & International Law

Constitutional Courts and Judicial Review: Between Law and Politics

By Dieter Grimm
Coming Soon Hart Publishing Available July 2026

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781509976898
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
July 2026
Format
Paperback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Also available as

Details

A collection of essays from Dieter Grimm, Germany's most renowned constitutional scholar, shining a light on the jurisprudence of the German Constitutional Court. Established in 1951, the court has become a blueprint for new courts ever since and its jurisprudence, particularly in the field of fundamental rights, has influenced the decisions of judges throughout the world. After the seismic constitutional changes of the years 1989-90 in Germany and beyond, many countries adopted new democratic constitutions and established constitutional courts in order to make their constitutions effective.

Today, many of these courts are under attack both politically and intellectually. In this book, Grimm considers some of the fundamental questions under academic scrutiny today: are constitutional courts political or legal institutions? Is judicial review a political or a legal activity? Is it a threat to, or a condition, of democracy? Should these courts be abolished or strengthened? Is a rational interpretation of constitutional law possible? The essays provide answers to these questions and describe how constitutional courts work if they properly fulfill their function of enforcing the constitution. A special emphasis is put on the importance of constitutional interpretation: something, the author argues, that most critics of constitutional adjudication neglect.

Table of Contents

Part I: A Prelude
1. The Federal Constitutional Court of Germany – A Survey

Part II: Judicial Review and Democracy
2. Constitutional Adjudication in a Democratic System
3. Neither Indispensable nor Contradictory. Constitutional Adjudication and Democracy

Part III: Constitutional Adjudication: Law or Politics?
4. What Exactly is Political about Constitutional Adjudication?
5. Law or Politics? The Kelsen-Schmitt Controversy over Constitutional Adjudication and the Current Situation

Part IV: The Process: Constitutional Interpretation
6. Constitutions, Constitutional Courts and Constitutional Interpretation at the Interface of Law and Politics
7. On the Relationship between Interpretation Theory, Constitutional Adjudication and the Democracy Principle in Kelsen
8. Habermas on Constitutional Jurisprudence
9. Behind the Scenes: The Genesis of the Elfes Judgment
10. Constitutional Jurisprudence and Constitutional Scholarship

Part V: Institutional Questions
11. Problems Relating to the System of Specialised Constitutional Courts in Germany
12. On the Relationship Between the Constitutional Court and Ordinary Courts

Part VI: Europe: Competing Courts
13. The Role of National Constitutional Courts in European Democracy
14. A Long Time Coming

Part VII: Opponents
15. New Radical Criticism of Constitutional Adjudication
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