This series analyses the public law of the European legal space, which encompasses the law of the EU, the European Convention on Human Rights, and the domestic public laws of European states. This volume analyses the history, organization, and procedure of constitutional adjudication and outlines the historical process and current outlook.
1: Armin von Bogdandy, Peter M Huber, Christoph Grabenwarter,: Constitutional Adjudication in the European Legal Space
2: Christoph Grabenwarter: The Austrian Constitutional Court
3: Christian Behrendt: The Belgian Constitutional Court
4: David Kosa and Ladislav Vyhnanek: The Constitutional Court of Czechia
5: Kaarlo Tuori: Constitutional Review in Finland
6: Olivier Jouanjan: 1. Constitutional Justice in France
7: Anuscheh Farahat: 1. The German Federal Constitutional Court
8: Laszlo Solyom: The Constitutional Court of Hungary
9: Raffaele Bifulco and Davide Paris: The Italian Constitutional Court
10: Ineta Ziemele, Alla Spale, and Laila Jurcena: The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Latvia
11: Leonard Besselink: Constitutional Adjudication in the Netherlands
12: Piotr Tuleja: The Polish Constitutional Tribunal
13: Maria Lucia Amaral and Ravi Afonso Pereira: The Portuguese Constitutional Court
14: Juan Luis Requejo Pages: The Spanish Constitutional Tribunal
15: Giovanni Biaggini: Constitutional Adjudication in Switzerland
16: Peter E Quint: The Influence of the United States Supreme Sourt on Judicial Review in Europe