Bültmann & Gerriets
Debates in German Public Law
von Hermann Pünder, Christian Waldhoff
Verlag: Bloomsbury UK
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ISBN: 978-1-78225-199-6
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Erschienen am 18.07.2014
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 370 Seiten

Preis: 91,99 €

91,99 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Hermann Pünder is Professor of Public Law (including European Law), Science of Public Administration and Comparative Law at the Bucerius Law School, Hamburg.Christian Waldhoff is Professor of Public Law and the Law of Finance at the Humboldt University, Berlin.



Germany's Constitution - the Basic Law of 23 May 1949 - created a democratic constitution which, despite amendments, has held up over the years, even providing the legal basis for German reunification in 1990. When it was written, the Basic Law was initially regarded as a temporary solution which would last until a pan-German constitution could be created, but over the years it has grown to become a mainstay of post-war stability and has even become one of Germany's most successful exports. Foreign scholars are particularly interested in the German conception of fundamental rights and the mechanisms in place for enforcing them in the courts, as well as in Germany's federal structure. Making and applying administrative law and working alongside the system of EU law are also subjects of great interest. This book, developed by a group of scholars in honour of the 60th anniversary of the Basic Law, presents examples of fundamental aspects of current scholarly debate. The analyses found in this book present the latest scholarly discussions, specifically for a foreign audience, touching upon constitutional law, administrative law and the place of the Federal Republic within the system of European Union law, with constitutional law providing the constant framework.



Preface by the German Federal Minister of Interior
Hans-Peter Friedrich
Basics
Christoph Möllers, Berlin
The Scope and Legitimacy of Judicial Review in German Constitutional Law: Report on a missing debate
Constitutional Law
Christian Calliess, Berlin
Dimensions of Fundamental Rights - Duty to Respect v. Duty to Protect
Axel Tschentscher, Bern
Interpreting Fundamental Rights - Freedom v. Optimisation
Wolfram Cremer, Bochum
The Basic Right to Free Development of the Personality - Protection of Personality Development v. General Right of Freedom of Action
Bernd Grzeszick, Heidelberg
"The 'Serving' Freedom to Broadcast" - Subjective v. Objective Dimensions of a Fundamental Right: The reasons for and the course and borders of a separate German path in constitutional law
Thorsten Kingreen, Regensburg
Rule of Law v. Welfare State
Christian Waldhoff, Bonn
Federalism - "Cooperative Federalism" v. "Competitive Federalism"
Hanno Kube, Mainz
Financing the State - The Tax-Funded State v. Multiple and Mixed Financing Strategies
Stefan Mückl, Freiburg i.Br.
Public Church Law v. Religious Constitutional Law
Administrative Law
Matthias Jestaedt, Freiburg i.Br.
Democratic Legitimization of the Administrative Power - Exclusive v. Inclusive Democracy
Martin Eifert, Gießen
Conceptualizing Administrative Law - Legal Protection v. Regulatory Approach
Bernhard Wegener, Erlangen-Nürnberg
Subjective Public Rights - Historical Roots and Requisite Adjustments to the Confines of Legal Protection
Hermann Pünder, Hamburg
Dispute Over the Importance of Administrative Procedure - Instrumental v. Substantive Approach
European Integration
Marcel Kaufmann, Göttingen/Berlin
The Democratic Legitimation of the European Union
The Basic Law (Grundgesetz)