{"title":"关于“宪政”在一个不自由的国家的新书:András L Pap,匈牙利民主的衰落:法律和社会在一个不自由的民主(劳特利奇2018)","authors":"Nóra Chronowski","doi":"10.1515/icl-2018-0017","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Over the past eight years, the redrafting of the Hungarian constitutional landscape, the declaration of illiberal constitutionalism and its contagious effect across Central and Eastern Europe have firmly moved into research spotlight. Political analysts, lawyers, economists and other academics within liberal studies are making attempts to observe and assess the U-turn of this once hailed as promising and consolidated Central-European state, which was after its democratic transition of 1989–90 the eminent state for EU accession. Developments in Hungarian constitutional law after 2010 suggest that the era in Hungarian constitutionalism characterized by a commitment to the rule of law has been replaced by an era where the law is regarded as an instrument available to the government to rule. Under the new constitution, the constraints that follow from the rule of law have been habitually overridden or ignored by the government. The Constitutional Court’s attempts, to continue the legacy of pre-2010 constitutional practice, were reproached by the government who moved to delimit the powers of the Court or overrule its decisions by formal amending the text of the Constitution. Given this, Hungary offers one of the most striking examples of the degree to which an overwhelming political mandate can dismantle and paralyse key democratic institutions designed in the name of liberal constitutionalism yet not deeply rooted in the society. András L Pap’s monograph is a brand-new set of academic explanations that intend to support better understandings of illiberal constitutionalism in the making. The author – who is professor of constitutional law and doctor at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences; research chair and head of department for the study of constitutionalism and the rule of law at Hungarian Academy of Sciences","PeriodicalId":41321,"journal":{"name":"ICL Journal-Vienna Journal on International Constitutional Law","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"New Book on ‘Constitutionalism’ in an Illiberal State: András L Pap, Democratic Decline in Hungary: Law and Society in an Illiberal Democracy (Routledge 2018)\",\"authors\":\"Nóra Chronowski\",\"doi\":\"10.1515/icl-2018-0017\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Over the past eight years, the redrafting of the Hungarian constitutional landscape, the declaration of illiberal constitutionalism and its contagious effect across Central and Eastern Europe have firmly moved into research spotlight. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在过去的八年中,匈牙利宪法格局的重新起草,非自由宪政的宣言及其在中欧和东欧的传染效应已经成为研究的焦点。政治分析人士、律师、经济学家和自由主义研究领域的其他学者正试图观察和评估这个曾经被誉为有前途和巩固的中欧国家的180度大转弯,在1989年至1990年的民主转型之后,这个国家成为了加入欧盟的杰出国家。2010年以后匈牙利宪法的发展表明,以承诺法治为特征的匈牙利宪政时代已经被一个将法律视为政府统治工具的时代所取代。在新宪法下,政府习惯性地无视或无视法治带来的约束。宪法法院试图延续2010年以前的宪法惯例,但遭到了政府的谴责,政府试图通过正式修改宪法文本来划定法院的权力或推翻其裁决。鉴于此,匈牙利提供了一个最引人注目的例子,说明压倒性的政治授权可以在多大程度上摧毁和瘫痪以自由宪政的名义设计的关键民主制度,但这些制度并未深深扎根于社会。András L Pap的专著是一套全新的学术解释,旨在支持更好地理解正在形成的非自由宪政。作者是匈牙利科学院的宪法学教授和博士;匈牙利科学院宪政与法治研究系主任及系主任
New Book on ‘Constitutionalism’ in an Illiberal State: András L Pap, Democratic Decline in Hungary: Law and Society in an Illiberal Democracy (Routledge 2018)
Over the past eight years, the redrafting of the Hungarian constitutional landscape, the declaration of illiberal constitutionalism and its contagious effect across Central and Eastern Europe have firmly moved into research spotlight. Political analysts, lawyers, economists and other academics within liberal studies are making attempts to observe and assess the U-turn of this once hailed as promising and consolidated Central-European state, which was after its democratic transition of 1989–90 the eminent state for EU accession. Developments in Hungarian constitutional law after 2010 suggest that the era in Hungarian constitutionalism characterized by a commitment to the rule of law has been replaced by an era where the law is regarded as an instrument available to the government to rule. Under the new constitution, the constraints that follow from the rule of law have been habitually overridden or ignored by the government. The Constitutional Court’s attempts, to continue the legacy of pre-2010 constitutional practice, were reproached by the government who moved to delimit the powers of the Court or overrule its decisions by formal amending the text of the Constitution. Given this, Hungary offers one of the most striking examples of the degree to which an overwhelming political mandate can dismantle and paralyse key democratic institutions designed in the name of liberal constitutionalism yet not deeply rooted in the society. András L Pap’s monograph is a brand-new set of academic explanations that intend to support better understandings of illiberal constitutionalism in the making. The author – who is professor of constitutional law and doctor at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences; research chair and head of department for the study of constitutionalism and the rule of law at Hungarian Academy of Sciences