Review of Central and East European Law

Papers
(The median citation count of Review of Central and East European Law is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-06-01 to 2025-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Responsive Judicial Review “Light” in Central and Eastern Europe – A New Sheriff in Town?6
Rights Consciousness in Hungary and Some Comparative Remarks. Could an Increasing Level of Rights Consciousness Challenge the Autocratic Tradition?5
The Principle of Separation of Powers: the Case of Lithuania4
The Unfolding Illiberalism in Hungary3
Legislation on Same-Sex Partnerships in the Post-Communist Area: Case Study of the Czech Republic3
‘Everyday Judicial Populism’ in Hungary2
Labor Law Reforms after the Populist Turn in Hungary2
The Influence of the European Court of Justice and the Role of Social Imaginaries in EU Governance2
Doctrinal Experimenting with the Constitution in Lithuania: On the Structure of the Constitution, the Non-Amendability of Constitutional Provisions, and the Legal Force of ‘Pre-Constitutional’ Acts2
Shaping Presidential Powers in Hungary: Convention, Tradition and Informal Constitutional Amendments2
‘Shaming’ the Court: Ukraine’s Constitutional Court and the Politics of Constitutional Law in the Post-Euromaidan Era2
What Kind of Judicial Review for a Small, Post-Communist European Constitutional Democracy?2
Populism and Law in Hungary – Introduction to the Special Issue1
Historical Imagery and Mnemonic Constitutionalism in Belarus1
International Law and the Regulation of Resort to Force1
Civil Limitation Statutes and International Arbitration in Central Asia: not Business as Usual1
Constitutional Changes in Populist Times1
Illegal Legality and the Façade of Good Faith – Migration and Law in Populist Hungary1
Thirty Years of the Constitution of Lithuania – Introduction to the Special Issue1
The Temporary Transfer of Presidential Powers in the Czech Republic1
Towards an Effective Constitution in Lithuania: the Role of the Constitutional Court0
Assessing the Legal Boundaries of Military Support to Ukraine from the Perspective of Use of Force0
Suspension or Cessation of Hostilities under Ius Contra Bellum: Time for a New Legal Framework?0
Constitutional Imaginaries in Central and Eastern Europe – Layered Narratives on Symbolic-Imaginary Constitutionalism in a Region Marked by Semi-Permanent Transformation and Transition0
Sectoral Special Taxes in Hungary as Instruments of a Populist Fiscal Policy: A Legal Analysis0
The European Convention on Human Rights and the Lithuanian Constitutional Court: the echr’s Formal Status, Impact and Interaction Between the Court and the ECtHR0
International Law in Central Asia: Practices and Doctrines0
Judicial Interpretation and Competition Law Enforcement: Authoritarian Legal Culture, Semantic Dissonance and Skewed Agencification in Post-Socialist Croatia0
Back matter0
Responsive Judicial Review in Kelsenian Constitutional Courts: The Impeding Effects of Limited Standing and Formalism0
Imaginary of Post-National European Constitutionalism: Lessons from Central European Philosophy, Sociology and Jurisprudence0
Front matter0
Zombie Self-determination?0
Troubled Nexuses Between International and Domestic Law in the Post-Soviet Space0
Backsliding into Judicial Oligarchy? The Cautionary Tale of Georgia’s Failed Judicial Reforms, Informal Judicial Networks and Limited Access to Leadership Positions0
Legal Challenges in Prosecuting the Crime of Aggression in the Russo-Ukrainian War0
The European Court of Human Rights’ Case Law on the Rights of Judges in the cee States – Towards A Rule of Law Standard?0
“But what About Kosovo?” Bundestag Debates on the Use of Force Before and After Zeitenwende0
Front matter0
Bridging Between an Effective Economy and Environmental Protection Under the Lithuanian Constitution0
The Legal Consequences of Unfair Contract Terms in Consumer Loan Agreements Valorized with Foreign Currency0
Two Decades of Penal Populism – The Case of Hungary0
Effective Judicial Protection of EU Law and Romanian Courts: Winding Through Res Judicata and State Liability0
Unmasking Authoritarian Constitutional Imaginary0
Transitory Imaginaries in Central and Eastern Europe: Reconsidering Constitutional Tradition and Constitutional Transition from Symbolic-Imaginary Perspective0
The Interplay between Ukraine’s Domestic Legislation on Conflict and Uncontrolled Territories and its Strategic Use of ‘Lawfare’ before Russia’s 2022 Invasion of Ukraine – A Troubled Nexus?0
Constitutional Review as a Democratic Instrument0
Poland’s Rule of Law Breakdown Continued: Judge Żurek’s Battle for Judicial Independence Within the European Human Rights Framework0
Responsive Judicial Review in Central & Eastern Europe0
Back matter0
Contents0
The Concept of the ‘Living Constitution’ in Russian Constitutional Theory and Practice0
Changing Forms of Maximalism in the Decision-Making of the Czech Constitutional Court0
The Oxymoron of Annexation: An Illegal Act of Law0
The Essence of the Right to Property under Art 1 of Protocol 1 to the echr: An Inviolable Core or a Purely Symbolic Concept? Cases from Central and Eastern Europe revisited0
Between Dialogue, Conflict, and Competition: The Limits of Responsive Judicial Review in the Case of the Romanian Constitutional Court0
Regulating without Regulation? Regulating without the Sovereign?0
Tax Treatment of Crypto Assets Under Serbian Law – Status Quo and Future Challenges0
Uses and Misuses of International Law: The War in Ukraine and Collective Self-Defense0
Front matter0
Accented Universality: Exploring Accountability as a Non-Translatable Concept in Central Asia0
Serbian Constitutional Court – (In)dependent Protector of the Rule of Law and Human Rights?0
Reimagining Spaces in Central and Eastern Europe or Memory Roulette: Legal, Political and Social Aspects0
How can legal interpretation change the legal order into legal disorder? (Lessons from the Czech Republic)0
The Russian Approach to the Permissibility of Examining Jurors in the Light of Foreign Law: Reflecting on the Arguments of the Russian Constitutional Court0
Displacing the Constitution: Modernity, Sovereignty and Crisis in Interwar Romania0
The Status of Crimea and the Sea of Azov as a Jurisdictional Hurdle in Ukraine v. Russia0
Ideological Concepts in ‘Formalism, Decisionism and Conservatism in Russian Law’ (2021) by Mikhail Antonov0
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