Articles for category: AAA General

E-Government upside down

The story of Joshua Bowden's legal chatbots that help people fight unjustified parking tickets and eviction orders challenges common assumptions about eGovernment: Automation can actually help to further the rule of law culture and to make the administration more humane.

Kalter Entzug: Auch Junkies haben Menschenrechte

Drogenabhängigen, die im Gefängnis sitzen, darf der Staat nicht ohne weiteres den Zugang zu Substitutpräparaten wie Methadon verweigern. Mit diesem Urteilsspruch hat der Europäische Gerichtshof für Menschenrechte in Straßburg der bayerischen Drogenbekämpfungs- und Justizvollzugspraxis heute ordentlich einen mitgegeben. Aus verfassungsrechtlicher Perspektive finde ich an der Entscheidung aber vor allem etwas anderes interessant – nämlich, wie unterschiedlich die Welt aussieht, wenn man mit den Augen eines Menschenrechtsgerichtshofs bzw. einer bayerischen Strafvollstreckungskammer betrachtet.

Polish Constitutional Tribunal goes down with dignity

On 11 of August 2016 the Polish Constitutional Tribunal (“Tribunal”) decided case K 39/16 in which it disqualified, for the second time in the span of 5 months, court-packing provisions contained in the Law of 22 July, 2016 on the Constitutional Tribunal. Separation of powers, judicial independence and effective functioning of the constitutional court were again the keywords that informed the analysis. After this most recent case the clock is ticking on the Tribunal and this time the self-defense by way of courageous judicial pronouncements might not be enough to survive.

The TTIP Negotiations Innovations: On Legal Reasons for Cheer

After 36 months of talks, the developments in the EU’s proposals for TTIP are far from perfect or complete. However, they demonstrate a huge faith in the EU’s power to institutionally nudge global trade - and render it more legitimate and accountable, as a good global governance actor should. They arguably do provide important reasons for cheer about the evolution of global trade through law.

Islam on the Beach – The Burkini Ban in France

In 1964, a young woman wearing a monokini played table tennis on the Croisette, the famous road along the shore in the city of Cannes. She was sentenced for outraging public decency. Half a century later, the mayor of Cannes just banned on his beaches the burkini, a full-body swimsuit weared by some Muslim women. Some other coastal cities followed, one administrative tribunal confirmed, and a new controversy around the keyword “laïcité” was born. It seems to me that the burkini-ban is a legal error and a political mistake.