权利革命与反革命:匈牙利的民主倒退与人权

Q2 Social Sciences Law and Ethics of Human Rights Pub Date : 2020-05-01 DOI:10.1515/lehr-2020-2013
Gábor Halmai
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文讨论了2010年后匈牙利的民主倒退,以及它如何影响这个欧盟成员国的人权状况。该条的主要论点是,矛盾的是,1989年不合法的宪法提供了对基本权利的全面保护,而2011年程序上合法的制宪导致了权利及其宪法保障的削弱。文章首先将1989-1990年发生的民主转型描述为一场权利革命,并将2011年“不自由”宪法(称为《基本法》)的结果描述为反革命。文章的第二部分阐述了这场“法治革命”之后对人权保障的宪法和法律规制,以及第一个宪法法院运用“无形宪法”概念保护人权的积极法理学。第三部分讨论了新的《基本法》的权利规定和若干法规取消了对人权的保障,并特别注意到诸如宪法法院、普通司法机构和监察专员以及民间社会组织等国家机构有效保护基本权利的可能性越来越小。第四部分评估了欧洲机构为迫使匈牙利政府遵守《欧洲人权公约》和《欧洲联盟条约》中规定的人权标准所做的努力。文章的结论是,无论是内部挑战还是外部挑战,都无法阻止一个没有人权保障的新专制政权的发展。
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Rights Revolution and Counter-Revolution: Democratic Backsliding and Human Rights in Hungary
Abstract The Article discusses the democratic backsliding after 2010 in Hungary, and how it affected the state of human rights in the country, a Member State of the European Union. The main argument of the Article is that paradoxically the non-legitimate 1989 constitution provided full-fledged protection of fundamental rights, while the procedurally legitimate 2011 constitution-making resulted in curtailment of rights and their constitutional guarantees. The Article first describes the democratic transition that occurred in 1989–1990 as a rights revolution and the results of the 2011 “illiberal” constitution, called Fundamental Law, as counter-revolution. The second part of the Article illustrates the constitutional and statutory regulation of human rights protection after this “rule of law revolution,” and the activist jurisprudence of the first Constitutional Court using the concept of an “invisible constitution” to protect human rights. The third part discusses the rights provisions of the new Fundamental Law and several statutes dismantling the guarantees of human rights, with special attention to the decreased possibilities of state institutions, such as the Constitutional Court, the ordinary judiciary and ombudsmen, as well as civil society organizations to effectively protect fundamental rights. The fourth part assesses the efforts of European institutions to force the Hungarian government to comply with the human rights standards laid down in the European Convention of Human Rights and in the Treaty of the European Union. The Article concludes that neither internal nor external challenges could prevent the development of a new authoritarian regime with no guaranteed human rights.
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来源期刊
Law and Ethics of Human Rights
Law and Ethics of Human Rights Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
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