1 / 0

20th Century Constitutional law

20th Century Constitutional law. 1914 1945. Fall of the empires Development of the totalitarian regimes (socialist, fascist, nazi). The aftermath of WWI. President Wilson and the national state Germany Weimar republic Distrust of democracy Austria

vlad
Télécharger la présentation

20th Century Constitutional law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 20th Century Constitutionallaw

  2. 1914 1945 Fall of the empires Development of the totalitarian regimes (socialist, fascist, nazi)
  3. The aftermath of WWI President Wilson and the national state Germany Weimar republic Distrust of democracy Austria The fall of the Habsburg Empire Harassedminorities Europe: dynastickingdoms national states
  4. The totalitarianstates:Russia Socialism The Bolshevik revolution of 1917 Totalitarianregime Symbioticrelationshipbetweenstate and law Law (and constitution) as a tool to control the masses
  5. The totalitarianstates:Italy

    Fascism The economiccrisis The entity of the nation Apposeparliamentarism Authoritarianleadership Corporations
  6. The totalitarianstates:Germany Nazism Hitler State Chancellor, 1933 Weimar constitution Enablingact Racialdistincsion of the national state Apposeparliamentarism Authoritarianleadership
  7. PostwarEuropeCold War (1947-1991)
  8. Nationalism Fall of the Eastern bloc and Yugoslavia  new countries Scotland independent? 2014 referendum.
  9. France Social and political crisis New constitution 1946 New constitution 1958. Power transferred to the president. Algeria independent 1962. End of French colonialism.
  10. Bundesrepublik Deutschland BRD formed in 1949. Constitution from 1949 relates to Weimar constitution. Mechanisms that would prevent totalitarian ideas. American legal thinking: Separation of Powers (dates back to Montesquieu) Bundesverfassungsgericht – Supreme court of the US Federation of Bundesländer.
  11. The Welfare state Large public sector Military, courts, schools, hospitals and other public bureaus. Administrative law
  12. European Union: history European Coal and Steel Community Euratom European Economic Community European Union Treatyof Maastricht Treatyof Amsterdam Treatyof Nice Treatyof Lisbon
  13. European Union: goals Article3 TEU Free movement Internalmarket
  14. European Union: currentdiscussions Supremacy Accordingto the CJEU Accordingto national courts PoliticalUnion Hobbes and Locke
  15. The Council of Europe (May 5, 1949) Europe’s first political institution and now its largest Guardian of human rights, democracy and rule of law European Court of Human Rights: the conscience of the continent 47 Member States, except for Belarus, Kazakhstan and Vatican City Situated on the border of France and Germany Not part of the European Union (28 Members States)
  16. European Political Cooperation: The Parliamentary Assembly 47 delegations of MPs from national parliaments It monitors whether the Council’s conventions are being respected It produces reports based on fact finding missions around Europe Recommendations are voted upon and sent to the Committee of Ministers
  17. The Council of Europe – Global Cooperation European Union Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) The European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines and Healthcare (EDQM)
More Related