The Achilles Heel of Constitutional Jurisprudence: Conceptualization of Minority Rights by Constitutional Courts in Central and Eastern Europe

Tamás Korhecz, Noémi Nagy
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Abstract

The minority question has long been a hot topic in Central and Eastern Europe. Whereas most CEE countries guarantee the privileged position of the dominant nation, they also recognize the existence of national minorities and provide special rights for them. Hence there is an apparent contradiction between the values of the nation-states: unity and diversity. This article proposes that to resolve this contradiction, it is necessary to define the concept, scope and limitations of group-specific minority rights, as well as their relationship with other human rights and the nation-state. Constitutional courts are appropriate candidates for this task. However, based on our analysis of the relevant constitutional jurisprudence of five CEE countries – Croatia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, and Slovenia – it seems that constitutional courts in the region have failed to properly conceptualize minority rights. Instead of developing appropriate tests for assessing the constitutionality of legal regulations, they have only superficially touched upon the conceptual issues of minority rights, using incidental, case-by-case arguments to justify the (un)constitutionality of the legal provisions. Therefore, this article also attempts to outline a constitutionality test that may be suitable for constitutional courts to consistently evaluate submissions that challenge the constitutionality of laws on minority rights.
宪法判例的致命弱点:中欧和东欧宪法法院对少数人权利的概念界定
长期以来,少数民族问题一直是中东欧的热门话题。大多数中欧和东欧国家在保证主体民族特权地位的同时,也承认少数民族的存在,并为他们提供特殊权利。因此,民族国家的价值观:统一性与多样性之间存在着明显的矛盾。本文提出,要解决这一矛盾,就必须界定特定群体的少数民族权利的概念、范围和限制,以及这些权利与其他人权和民族国家的关系。宪法法院是完成这一任务的合适人选。然而,根据我们对克罗地亚、匈牙利、罗马尼亚、塞尔维亚和斯洛文尼亚这五个中欧和东欧国家相关宪法判例的分析,该地区的宪法法院似乎未能正确理解少数群体权利的概念。它们没有为评估法律规定的合宪性制定适当的检验标准,而只是肤浅地触及少数群体权利的概念问题,利用附带的、逐个案例的论据来证明法律规定的(不)合宪性。因此,本文也试图勾勒出一种合宪性检验标准,该标准可能适合宪法法院对质疑少数群体权利法律合宪性的呈件进行一致的评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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