Results 71 to 80 of about 43,519 (276)
A Post‐Neoliberal European Order? Public Purpose and Private Accumulation in Green Industrial Policy
This article examines the emerging legal rationalities of EU's green industrial policy, questioning if they represent a departure from the neoliberal paradigm that prioritised safeguarding the competitive order. I argue that the European Green Industrial Plan signals a new role for law in the orchestration and balancing of public purpose and private ...
Ioannis Kampourakis
wiley +1 more source
Using the example of urban planning law as a codified branch of law with a formally uncertain status, the article reveals the importance of constitutionalism for the purposes of creating such certainty.
N. A. Vovk
doaj +1 more source
In the present article author considers questions of influence of the Constitution of the Russian Federation on regulation of questions of local government.
Oleg J. Gorkovchenko
doaj
Russian Public Assembly Law: Constitutional Evolution 1993–2023
The current Public Assembly Law in the Russian Federation, which regulates the implementation of the constitutional right to freedom of peaceful assembly in Russia, has been developed and formed over the course of the past three decades, following the ...
A. Salenko
doaj +1 more source
Death Penalty Politics and Symbolic Law in Russia [PDF]
In contemporary Russia there is widespread support for the death penalty. Recent Russian presidents have endorsed the nation’s entry into the European Community (EC).
Galliher, John F., Semukhina, Olga B.
core +1 more source
Openness as a Political Commitment
Journal of Social Philosophy, Volume 56, Issue 4, Page 585-603, Winter 2025.
Tadhg Ó Laoghaire
wiley +1 more source
Issues of Assessing the Constitutionality of Transitional Normative Regulation (Based on the Practice of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation) [PDF]
Aleksei Petrov
openalex +1 more source
How will the European Court of Human Rights deal with the UK in Iraq?: lessons from Turkey and Russia [PDF]
The decision by the US and UK governments to use military force against Iraq in 2003 and the subsequent occupation and administration of that State, has brought into sharp focus fundamental fault lines in international law.
Bowring, Bill
core
JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, Volume 63, Issue S1, Page 268-276, November 2025.
Tom Casier
wiley +1 more source

