When ‘internationalization of constitutional law’ and ‘constitutionalization of international law’ were initially phrased at the beginning of the twenty-first century, most constitutional and international lawyers were not certain about what the two phrases really meant or were intended to mean.1 In less than a decade, law review articles and edited works addressing these two and related topics have burgeoned at unprecedented speed. Now, comparative constitutional lawyers typically include some international courts and their case laws such as the European Court of...
Users without a subscription are not able to see the full
content. Please,
subscribe
or
login
to access all content.