Full Description
The Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law is a collection of articles written mostly by Hungarian authors covering developments in the field of international law and EU law, and progress indomestic implementation and application of these fields of law. The thematic part of the present volume centres around the issues of nationality, identity, loyalty and citizenship. The authors explore the gradually changing state approaches to multiple citizenship, as well as the shift in the focus of international conventions dealing with nationality. The Yearbook also contains numerous articles analysing well-known Hungary-related cases and their assessment from the perspective of Hungarian legal experts. The Yearbook offers a comprehensive picture of the state of application and implementation of EU law and international law in Hungary.
Contents
1. The Background and the Functions of the European Convention on Nationality; 2. The Right to a Nationality as a Human Right?; 3. Fear of Autonomy for Minorities; 4. The 'Genuine Link' Principle in Nationality Law; 5. Multiple Citizenship in Hungary: Recent Developments in Europe; 6. The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality under International Law and EU Law: New Perspectives; 7. Dual Citizenship in the Force Field of the European Union; 8. Multiple Citizenship - A Break with the One Man, One Vote principle?; 9. The Baka Case - The Unbearable Price of Individual Justice; 10. The Labour Lawyer's Reading of the Baka Case; 11. The Benefits and Limitations of a Human Rights Approach to Environmental Protection; 12. Law in Mind: Towards an Explanatory Framework for Customary International Law; 13. Jurisdiction vs. State Immunity in the 21st Century; 14. Understanding the Responsibility to Protect: Textual Anomalies and Interpretative Challenges in the 2005 World Summit Outcome; 15. 14, 15, 16 - Reforms of the European Court of Human Rights; 16. Repetitive cases before the Strasbourg Court: The Pilot Judgment Procedure at the European Court of Human Rights; 17. Human Rights, Civil Rights and Eternity Clauses; 18. GMO as a Weapon - a.k.a. a New Form of Aggression?; 19. The Compensation for Agricultural Land Confiscated by the Benes Decrees in the Light of Free Movement of Capital; 20. European Values, Fundamental Rights and the Private International Law of the European Union; 21. The Connecting Factor of Nationality in Relation to the Principles of EU Law; 22. Legal Issues of Harmonizing European Legal Migration; 23. European Dilemmas of Family Reunification; 24. The Myths We Built around EU Consumer Law; 25. How to Regulate? The Role of Self-Regulation and Co-Regulation; 26. The Possibilities of the Restraint of Media Content Prior to Publication; 27. Quota Rules in respect of Audiovisual Media Regulation - On the Borderline of Economic and Cultural Considerations; 28. Traps of Judicial Cooperation in Criminal Matters: The Tobin Case; 29. On the Issue of the Representation of Nationalities in the Parliament; 30. Case Law of the Supreme Court and the Curia in Administrative and Labour Law Cases; 31. Case Law of the Supreme Court and the Curia in Civil and Economic Law Cases; 32. Case Law of the Supreme Court and the Curia in Criminal Law Cases; 33. "You Could have Put it more Politely" - Remarks on the Constitutional Regulations of Freedom of Assembly; 34. Children's Rights in the Hungarian Ombudsman's Practice; 35. The Effectiveness of the Principle of Equal Pay in Hungarian judicial Practice with Special Attention to the New Directions of European Legal Practice; 36. Summary of Decision No. 14/2013. (VI. 17.) AB of the Constitutional Court of Hungary on the constitutionality of Article 17(3) of the Act No. CXCVI of 2011 on National Assets and of Article 4 of the Act No. LXXI of 1994 on Arbitration; 37. Commentary on the Decision No. 14/2013 (VI.17.) of the Hungarian Constitutional Court; 38. The Hungarian Constitutional Court's Judgment on Hungary's New Anti-Arbitration Rules; 39. About the Monograph on the Incorporation of Norms of International Origin into the Hungarian Legal System; 40. Handbook on European Private Law; 41. The Legal Status of the Arctic in International Law.