Jump to Content
Jump to Main Navigation
User Account
Personal Profile
See all online law products
More
About
Subscriber Services
Take a Tour
FAQs
Help
Contact Us
Search
Browse all
Geographic regions
Geographic Regions
Africa
Americas
Antarctic Region
Asia
Europe
Oceania
Jurisdictions
Content type
Constitutional instruments and materials
Current constitutions
Constitutional amendments
Constitutional foundation documents
Constitutionally related documents
National instruments and materials
National legislation
Commentary and analysis
Book content
Encyclopedia entries
Bibliographies
Constitutional overviews (by jurisdiction)
Chronologies
Notes
US State
United States [us]
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
United States Minor Outlying Islands [um]
United States Freely Associated States
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Subject
Constitutional history
Constitutional law and processes
Cultures and people
Legal system
Policy areas
Politics and government
Rights
The state
My Content
(0)
Recently viewed
(0)
Save Entry
My Searches
(0)
Recently viewed
(0)
Save Search
Print
Save
Cite
Email this content
Share Link
Copy this link, or click below to email it to a friend
Email this content
or copy the link directly:
https://oxcon.ouplaw.com/abstract/10.1093/law/9780190214555.001.0001/law-9780190214555-indexList-1
The link was not copied. Your current browser may not support copying via this button.
Link copied successfully
Copy link
Share This
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
Sign in
Get help with access
You could not be signed in, please check and try again.
Username
Please enter your Username
Password
Please enter your Password
Forgot password?
Don't have an account?
Sign in via your Institution
You could not be signed in, please check and try again.
Sign in with your library card
Please enter your library card number
View translated passages only
Oxford Law Citator
Contents
Expand All
Collapse All
Preliminary Material
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Main Text
I The Constitutional Court
1 The Historical Development of Italian Constitutional Adjudication
1 Constitutional Justice prior to 1948
1.1 The First Italian Constitution
1.1.1 Parliamentary Omnipotence
1.1.2 The Lack of an Independent Judiciary
1.2 Two Exceptions to the Absence of Judicial Review
2 American-Style Constitutional Review during the Postwar Transition
3 A Complex Conception: Designing the Constitutional Court
3.1 The Constituent Assembly Debate
3.2 The Incomplete Court
4 A Long Gestation: The Activation of the Court
4.1 Fundamental Choices
4.2 The Delay in the Parliamentary Election of Justices
5 The Birth of a New System of Constitutional Adjudication
5.1 A Context of Uncertainty
5.2 The Court’s Rules of Procedure
5.3 The “Italian Marbury v. Madison ”: Judgment 1/1956
6 Taking a Deep Breath: The Court’s Relationship to the Body Politic
7 The “Eras” of the Constitutional Court
8 The Present and Future of the Court: Constitutional Justice in Global Context
2 The Constitutional Court: Rules and Model
1 The System of Constitutional Justice Designed by the Constituent Assembly
2 Composition
2.1 The Principle of Collegiality
3 Jurisdiction
3.1 Conflicts of Attributions
3.2 Charges against the President of the Republic
3.3 Admissibility of Referenda
3.4 Judicial Review of Statutes
4 The System of Judicial Review
4.1 The Direct Method of Judicial Review
4.2 The Incidental Method of Judicial Review
4.2.1 A Judge in the Course of a Judicial Proceeding Must Raise a Question
4.2.2 The Question of Constitutional Legitimacy Must Be Relevant and Not Manifestly Unfounded
4.2.3 The Question Can Be Raised by the Parties or by the Judge on His Own Motion
5 Acts that Are Subject to Judicial Review
6 The Italian Model of Judicial Review: “Cooperative” and “Networked”
3 Forms and Methods of Judicial Reasoning
1 A Concurrent Plurality of Methods of Interpretation
2 Reasonableness, Proportionality, and Balancing of Values
3 The Use of Transnational Law and Comparative Method
4 The Decisions of the Constitutional Court and Their Effects
II Constitutional Jurisprudence
4 Key Rights and Freedoms
1 The Rights and Duties of Citizens in the Constitution
2 The Fundamental Principles of Inviolability and Equality
2.1 Inviolable Rights
2.2 Equality
3 Personal Liberty
4 Freedom of Religion
5 Life, Reproduction, Health
5.1 Right to Life
5.2 Reproductive Freedom
5.3 Health
5.4 End of Life
6 Family
7 Social Rights
8 Citizens and Migrants
5 Powers and Conflicts
1 Relation of Powers and the Unique Role of the Judiciary
2 Executive vs. President of the Republic
3 Executive vs. Parliament
4 Judiciary vs. Parliament
5 Judiciary vs. President of the Republic
6 Regionalism
1 Not “Federal” but “Regional”
2 The 2001 Constitutional Reform of the Regional System
3 Statutory Autonomy
4 Legislative Autonomy
4.1 How to Define a Matter? From the Literal Meaning to the “Prevalence Doctrine”
4.2 The Strong “Centripetal” Pull in the Distribution of Powers between State and Regions
4.2.1 “Cross-Cutting” Competences
4.2.2 “Catch-all” Competences
4.2.3 “Detailed” Principles
5 Administrative Autonomy: The Principle of Subsidiarity
5.1 “Vertical” vs. “Horizontal” Subsidiarity
5.2 The “Subsidiarity Call” Doctrine
5.3 Horizontal Subsidiarity: The “Social Liberty” Doctrine
6 Financial Autonomy
7 National Constitutional Adjudication in the European Space
1 The European Clauses of the Italian Constitution
2 The Constitutional Court and the European Union
2.1 Constitutional Resistance to the Supremacy of European Legislation
2.2 Limitations of Sovereignty
2.3 Constitutional Surrender to the Supremacy of EU Legislation
2.4 The Last Citadel: The Doctrine of “Counter-Limits”
2.5 The Constitutional Court and the Preliminary Ruling to the Court of Justice of the European Union
2.5.1 The Constitutional Court as a “Sovereign” Judge
2.5.2 A One-Way Conversation: Lower Courts as the Official “Speakers” of the National Legal System
2.5.3 The First Preliminary Ruling of the Italian Constitutional Court to the Court of Justice of the European Union
3 The Constitutional Court and the European Convention on Human Rights
3.1 The European Convention on Human Rights: A General Overview
3.2 From “Constitutional Patriotism” to “Integration through Interpretation”
3.3 Interpreting Domestic Law “According to” the European Convention
3.4 The Turning Point: The European Convention on Human Rights’ Special Rank
Conclusion: The “Italian Style” in Global Constitutional Adjudication
1 The Globalization of Constitutional Adjudication
2 The “Italian Style” in Constitutional Adjudication
2.1 Institutional Relationality
2.2 Interpretive Relationality
3 The Sources of the Italian Constitutional Court’s Distinctive Voice
4 An “Italian Style” for a Pluralistic Global Constitutionalism?
Further Material
Appendix I The Constitution of the Republic of Italy
Fundamental Principles
Art. 1
Art. 2
Art. 3
Art. 4
Art. 5
Art. 6
Art. 7
Art. 8
Art. 9
Art. 10
Art. 11
Art. 12
Part I Rights and Duties of Citizens
Title I Civil Relations
Art. 13
Art. 14
Art. 15
Art. 16
Art. 17
Art. 18
Art. 19
Art. 20
Art. 21
Art. 22
Art. 23
Art. 24
Art. 25
Art. 26
Art. 27
Art. 28
Title II Ethical and Social Relations
Art. 29
Art. 30
Art. 31
Art. 32
Art. 33
Art. 34
Title III Economic Relations
Art. 35
Art. 36
Art. 37
Art. 38
Art. 39
Art. 40
Art. 41
Art. 42
Art. 43
Art. 44
Art. 45
Art. 46
Art. 47
Title IV Political Relations
Art. 48
Art. 49
Art. 50
Art. 51
Art. 52
Art. 53
Art. 54
Part II Organization of the Republic
Title I The Parliament
s.I The Houses
Art. 55
Art. 56
Art. 57
Art. 58
Art. 59
Art. 60
Art. 61
Art. 62
Art. 63
Art. 64
Art. 65
Art. 66
Art. 67
Art. 68
Art. 69
s.II The Legislative Process
Art. 70
Art. 71
Art. 72
Art. 73
Art. 74
Art. 75
Art. 76
Art. 77
Art. 78
Art. 79
Art. 80
Art. 81
Art. 82
Title II The President of the Republic
Art. 83
Art. 84
Art. 85
Art. 86
Art. 87
Art. 88
Art. 89
Art. 90
Art. 91
Title III The Government
s.I The Council of Ministers
Art. 92
Art. 93
Art. 94
Art. 95
Art. 96
s.II Public Administration
Art. 97
Art. 98
s.III Auxiliary Bodies
Art. 99
Art. 100
Title IV The Judiciary
s.I The Organization of the Judiciary
Art. 101
Art. 102
Art. 103
Art. 104
Art. 105
Art. 106
Art. 107
Art. 108
Art. 109
Art. 110
s.II Rules on Jurisdiction
Art. 111
Art. 112
Art. 113
Title V Regions, Provinces, Municipalities
Art. 114
Art. 115
Art. 116
Art. 117
Art. 118
Art. 119
Art. 120
Art. 121
Art. 122
Art. 123
Art. 124
Art. 125
Art. 126
Art. 127
Art. 128
Art. 129
Art. 130
Art. 131
Art. 132
Art. 133
Title VI Constitutional Guarantees
s.I The Constitutional Court
Art. 134
Art. 135
Art. 136
Art. 137
s.II Amendments to the Constitution. Constitutional Laws
Art. 138
Art. 139
Transitional and Final Provisions
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
XVIII
Amendments of the Italian Constitution
Constitutional Amendments
Appendix II Justices 1955 to Present
Justices
Appendix III Basic Statistics on the Constitutional Court
Table of Cases
Italian Constitutional Court
Italian Court of Cassation
Consiglio di Stato
United States
Court of Justice of the European Union
Germany
House of Lords
European Court of Human Rights
Index
Sign up for alerts
Index
From:
Italian Constitutional Justice in Global Context
Vittoria Barsotti, Paolo G. Carozza, Marta Cartabia, Andrea Simoncini
Content type:
Book content
Product:
Oxford Constitutions of the World [OCW]
Published in print:
01 January 2016
ISBN:
9780190214555
Prev
|
Next
[18.97.9.170]
18.97.9.170