Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs | National Law School | General Stacks | 342.438029 SAD (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 38821 |
342.124 DAN The global south and comparative constitutional law / | 342.24083 LAM The global reach of European refugee law / | 342.410878 RAC Women's legal landmarks : celebrating 100 years of women and law in the UK and Ireland / | 342.438029 SAD Poland's Constitutional Breakdown / | 342.54 ALV A Constitution to Keep: Sedition and Free Speech in Modern India / | 342.54 HAN - 1 Justice B. L. Hansaria's sixth schedule to the Constitution / | 342.54 HAN - 2 Justice B. L. Hansaria's sixth schedule to the Constitution / |
Contents
List of Abbreviations;
1. Anti-constitutional Populist Backsliding;
2. Before the Breakdown: 1989–2015;
3. Dismantling Checks and Balances (I): The Remaking of the Constitutional Tribunal;
4. Dismantling Checks and Balances (II): Judges and Prosecutors;
5. Undoing the Institutions of the Democratic State;
6. An Assault on Individual Rights;
7. Why Did It Happen?;
8. Europe to the Rescue;
9. Illiberal Democracy or Populist Authoritarianism?;
Afterword;
Bibliography;
Index
Since 2015, Poland's populist Law and Justice Party (PiS) has been dismantling the major checks and balances of the Polish state and subordinating the courts, the civil service, and the media to the will of the executive. Political rights have been radically restricted, and the Party has captured the entire state apparatus. The speed and depth of these antidemocratic movements took many observers by surprise: until now, Poland was widely regarded as an example of a successful transitional democracy. Poland's anti-constitutional breakdown poses three questions that this book sets out to answer: What, exactly, has happened since 2015? Why did it happen? And what are the prospects for a return to liberal democracy? These answers are formulated against a backdrop of current worldwide trends towards populism, authoritarianism, and what is sometimes called 'illiberal democracy'. As this book argues, the Polish variant of 'illiberal democracy' is an oxymoron. By undermining the separation of powers, the PiS concentrates all power in its own hands, rendering any democratic accountability illusory. There is, however, no inevitability in these anti-democratic trends: this book considers a number of possible remedies and sources of hope, including intervention by the European Union.
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