POSTS BY Maximilian Steinbeis
09 February 2019

Brother’s Keeper

On European judges looking out for one another, and other glad and less glad constitutional tidings. Continue reading >>
0
02 February 2019

Among the Free and Equal

On parity, parties, parliaments and other particularities of the constitutional week that was. Continue reading >>
26 January 2019

Minister of Civil Resistance

On law, politics and a fellow named Herbert Kickl. Continue reading >>
0
19 January 2019

As You Like It

On Brexit, the ultimate question of Life, the Universe and Everything and other constitutional and unconstitutional conundra. Continue reading >>
15 January 2019

Das Minus zum Minimum: Hartz-IV-Sanktionen vor dem Bundes­verfassungs­gericht

Jeder Mensch hat ein Grundrecht auf Gewährleistung des menschenwürdigen Existenzminimums. Wie ist damit vereinbar, dass das Arbeitslosengeld II gekürzt oder gestrichen wird, wenn man seine Mitwirkungspflichten verletzt? Dazu hat heute das Bundesverfassungsgericht eine auch verfassungsrechtlich spannende Anhörung durchgeführt. Continue reading >>
12 January 2019

Piercing the Hull

On the rocking of boats, the weathering of storms and other matters of constitutional seafaring. Continue reading >>
0
18 December 2018

Die AfD und ihr Rechtsbruch-Mythos: im Felde unbesiegt

Die AfD-Fraktion hat mit ihrer Organklage gegen die Flüchtlingspolitik der Bundesregierung seit 2015 in Karlsruhe verloren: Der Antrag ist unzulässig. Doch das ist nicht unbedingt ein Grund zum Frohlocken. Continue reading >>
15 December 2018

A Christmas Wish

On this crazy year of 2018 and how to move on with the Verfassungsblog project. Continue reading >>
0
08 December 2018

This Time it’s Serious

On burning barricades, shifting balances and other riotous matters of constitutionalism. Continue reading >>
06 December 2018
, , ,

Introduction: Constitutional Resilience and the German Grundgesetz

What lessons does the plight of the Polish and the Hungarian democracy hold for a seemingly stable constitutional state like Germany? How resilient would the German constitutional setup turn out to be in the case of an authoritarian majority taking and successfully holding on to power? What kind of legal or institutional changes may be helpful to make that event less likely and/or less hard to prevent? These were the questions we aimed to address in a debate jointly organized by Verfassungsblog and WZB Center for Global Constitutionalism, generously supported by Stiftung Mercator. Continue reading >>
Go to Top