Review of Central and East European Law

Papers
(The TQCC of Review of Central and East European Law is 1. 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 2022-06-01 to 2026-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Responsive Judicial Review “Light” in Central and Eastern Europe – A New Sheriff in Town?6
Material Constitution: The Case of Kosovo5
The Principle of Separation of Powers: the Case of Lithuania4
Rights Consciousness in Hungary and Some Comparative Remarks. Could an Increasing Level of Rights Consciousness Challenge the Autocratic Tradition?4
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’ Acts3
The Procedural Obligation to Protect the Right to Life: Compliance of the Georgian Law and Practice with the European Human Rights Standards3
The Influence of the European Court of Justice and the Role of Social Imaginaries in EU Governance3
The Unfolding Illiberalism in Hungary3
International Law and the Regulation of Resort to Force2
The Afterlife of an Unrecognized Entity: The Case of Nagorno-Karabakh and International Law2
‘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
Complex “Events”? Grasping International Crimes During and After the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War1
The Temporary Transfer of Presidential Powers in the Czech Republic1
On Indeterminacy and the Value of Ignorance: In Dialogue with Martti Koskenniemi1
Civil Limitation Statutes and International Arbitration in Central Asia: not Business as Usual1
Historical Imagery and Mnemonic Constitutionalism in Belarus1
Thirty Years of the Constitution of Lithuania – Introduction to the Special Issue1
Rule by Emergency Powers: On a Recent Amendment of the Hungarian Fundamental Law’s “Emergency Constitution”1
The Lingering Legacy of Yugoslav Social Property1
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