“羞辱”法院:乌克兰宪法法院和后亲欧盟时代的宪法政治

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q3 LAW
Andrii Nekoliak
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2014年的亲欧盟运动以来,乌克兰走上了改革的轨道,将国家“欧洲化”,并向其公民提供良好治理的承诺。随后的一系列立法和公共政策改革得到了乌克兰西方伙伴的财政和意识形态支持。迄今为止,研究主要集中在记录和分析国际捐助者参与乌克兰改革的过程。然而,缺乏的是对许多不同的国内应对捐助者实施改革的外部压力的分析。本文考察了乌克兰宪法法院自2020年以来关于司法自治和反腐败的判例法,考察了该法院对乌克兰国际捐助者和国内行动者领导的改革政治的法律回应。它揭示了一个国家宪法决策的问题本质,这个国家最近一直面临着来自现任政治家和民间社会的相当大的压力。文章指出了围绕乌克兰改革的政治进程(“麻烦的联系”)的一种模式,并将乌克兰的发展与摩尔多瓦和格鲁吉亚的局势进行了比较,这两个国家自2016年与欧盟签署联邦制协议以来,都面临着类似的改革挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘Shaming’ the Court: Ukraine’s Constitutional Court and the Politics of Constitutional Law in the Post-Euromaidan Era
Since the Euromaidan events of 2014, Ukraine has embarked on a reformist trajectory to ‘Europeanize’ the country and deliver the promise of good governance to its citizens. The series of legislative and public policy reforms that followed had financial and ideological support from Ukraine’s Western partners. To date, studies have focused on documenting and analyzing the course of international donors’ involvement in Ukraine’s reforms. What is lacking, however, is an analysis of the many different domestic responses to external pressure from donors to implement reforms. Examining Ukraine’s Constitutional Court case law on judicial self-government and anti-corruption from 2020, this article examines this court’s legal response to the politics of reform led by international donors and domestic actors in Ukraine. It reveals the problematic nature of constitutional decision-making in a country that has recently been facing considerable pressure from political incumbents and civil society. The article identifies a pattern that characterizes the political process (a ‘troubled nexus’) around the reforms in Ukraine and draws a parallel between Ukrainian developments and the situation in Moldova and Georgia, two countries that have been confronted with similar reform challenges since the enactment of the respective Association Agreements with the EU in 2016.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Review of Central and East European Law critically examines issues of legal doctrine and practice in the CIS and CEE regions. An important aspect of this is, for example, the harmonization of legal principles and rules; another facet is the legal impact of the intertwining of domestic economies, on the one hand, with regional economies and the processes of international trade and investment on the other. The Review offers a forum for discussion of topical questions of public and private law. The Review encourages comparative research; it is hoped that, in this way, additional insights in legal developments can be communicated to those interested in questions, not only of law, but also of politics, economics, and of society of the CIS and CEE countries.
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