04 February 2020

Fact Check: Is there a ‘Muzzle Law’ for Dutch Judges in the Making? No!

A few days ago the suggestion was made that a draft law is in the making in the Netherlands to prevent Dutch judges from ruling on politically sensitive issues. Should we worry about this? I think not. Continue reading >>
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Wiley and the European Law Journal

We want to believe that no self-respecting scholar will allow himself or herself to be used in any way by Wiley to defeat the principled stand taken by the Editors and Boards of the ELJ. It is we, scholars of European Law, who actually give commercial value to such a journal by submitting and publishing our work in its pages. We should not be complicit in undermining the most basic values of the scholarly world. Continue reading >>
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Contextualising Frontex: A Long-Term Perspective on Database Monitoring of Migrants

This blogpost contextualises Frontex by discussing a pioneer database in Europe, the German Central Foreigner Register that presumably served as a model when establishing the European databases, and by drawing some lessons from the German case for the European context regarding the effectiveness of database surveillance. Continue reading >>
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What a Journal Makes: As we say goodbye to the European Law Journal

On January 31st, the Editorial and Advisory Boards of the European Law Journal resigned en masse from their positions in protest after the publisher, Wiley, decided that it was not willing to ‘give away’ control and authority over editorial appointments and decisions to the academics on the journal’s Boards. We recount our small act of resistance here because we think there may be lessons for the wider academic community. Continue reading >>

Quo Vadis Frontex: Crossing the Fine Line Between Prevention and Repression?

For many years, Frontex and border control were of little interest to the wider European public. This changed in the wake of the so-called ‘migrant crisis’ as the agency and its various activities were thrust into the limelight due to a steady stream of allegations of misconduct. Continue reading >>
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03 February 2020

The Struggle of Strasbourg

This year’s Winter Session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) saw three distinct yet interrelated developments. On Tuesday, the Assembly decided to open a monitoring procedure with regard to Poland on behalf of the ongoing rule of law backsliding. On Wednesday, the Assembly decided to ratify the credentials of the Russian delegates which had previously been challenged both on procedural and on substantive grounds. Still on Wednesday, the Assembly backed the proposal for the introduction of a new ‘complementary joint procedure’, together with the Committee of Ministers, in response to violations of fundamental principles underlying the work of the organisation. Continue reading >>

A Very Short Introduction to Frontex— Unravelling the Trajectory of one of the EU’s Key Actors

This first contribution to the symposium briefly outlines the genesis, development, and status quo of the agency, while the ensuing analyses will zoom in on specific politico-legal matters that are at the core of the current debate. Continue reading >>
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01 February 2020

Die vollendete Trennung

Gestern haben die Brexiteers endlich bekommen, was sie wollten: Seit Mitternacht mitteleuropäischer Zeit ist Großbritannien nicht mehr Mitglied der EU. Ich war in London an diesem Tag, den hier tausende EU-Gegner*innen gefeiert haben. Und ehrlich gesagt, es war weniger spektakulär als all die Bilder es nahelegen. Was bleibt, ist ein Gefühl des Unwirklichen. Continue reading >>
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The Conference on the Future of Europe: an Open Letter

To the Presidents of the European Parliament, of the EU Commission and of the Council: Europe, and your new, yet already contested, political leadership can hardly afford to be associated with an initiative that might soon be perceived as top-down, unauthentic, outdated and out-of-touch with EU citizens’ daily lives. Continue reading >>
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31 January 2020

Macht endlich was!

Blockadehaltung, magisches Denken, abenteuerliche Behauptungen: die Weigerung der Regierungskoalition, für ein funktionales und verfassungskonformes Wahlrecht zu sorgen, kann man sich nur noch dadurch erklären, dass es ihr allein um den Erhalt der eigenen Vorteile, sprich: Mandate, geht. Ein letzter Hilferuf, bevor es zu spät ist. Continue reading >>

In Defence of Multilevel Citizenship – A Rejoinder

The twenty-two responses to Rainer Bauböck's proposal for strengthening urban citizenship suggest two general lessons. First, there is more common ground than expected. None of the authors defends a strong statist view that would not leave any space for a conversation about citizenship at the local level. Second, in spite of its long premodern pedigree, the idea of urban citizenship seems still so new that it needs to be fleshed out in more detail. Conceptual confusion makes it hard to distinguish misunderstanding from disagreement, so the most urgent task now seems to be clarification. Continue reading >>
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Medienverbote leicht gemacht

Das Urteil zu linksunten.indymedia.org ist weit über den Einzelfall aus verfassungsrechtlicher Sicht fatal. Das Bundesverwaltungsgericht will es dem Bundesinnenministerium offenbar ermöglichen, Medien wegen ihrer Veröffentlichungen mit einem Vereinsverbot zu belegen. Damit wird die föderale Kompetenzordnung durchbrochen und ein bedrohlicher Präzedenzfall für maßlose Beschneidungen der Medienfreiheit geschaffen. Continue reading >>
30 January 2020

A Political Promise or a Hollow Hope?

If one accepts the proposition that control of the gates is a core feature of state-centred citizenship, what can be the legal implications of urban citizenship, in addition to the ones that already exist? Continue reading >>
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Can Elections be Held under Unconstitutional Electoral Law?

After the collapse of the Slovenian government, a snap election will possibly take place in April. The Constitutional Court, however, had declared the electoral law partly unconstitutional. Could that throw the very constitutionality of the snap election into question? Continue reading >>

Citizenship Federalism and the Ambiguous Promise of Local Citizenship

Kenneth Stahl argues that many countries such as the United States already have a form of “citizenship federalism,” in which local (not specifically urban) citizenship, based on residence, exists alongside national citizenship, rooted in nationality. Continue reading >>
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“Judges should be fully insulated from any sort of pressure”

Prof. Koen Lenaerts, President of the Court of Justice of the European Union, explains why mutual trust and judicial independence are of fundamental importance to the EU Member States. Continue reading >>

Does Urban Citizenship Promote Inclusion for the Poor, Sick, and Outcast?

The assumption is that nation-states often undervalue potential immigrants and that cities would better value their potential contributions. Because citizenship involves not only inclusion but also exclusion, however, there are dangers to proposals such as Bauböck’s that “cities should determine who their citizens are independently of how states do this.” Continue reading >>
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29 January 2020
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„Was mich eigentlich interessiert, ist das Gesellschaftliche“

Ein Gespräch mit Marietta Auer, der designierten Direktorin am Max-Planck-Institut für Rechtsgeschichte in Frankfurt, über das Juristin- und Wissenschaftlerin-Werden in den 90ern, über die "inhärente Menschenwürdeverletzung" des Staatsexamens und über den Reiz des Heraustretens und von außen Draufschauens. Continue reading >>

‘Urban Citizenship’ in a Multipolar World

On 23 January 2020, the government of the People’s Republic of China imposed a quarantine on the central Chinese city of Wuhan, population eleven million. Stephen Minas reinforces the cautionary trend in this debate over the merits and prospects of ‘urban citizenship’. Continue reading >>
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Urban Citizenship – a Status or a Practice?

Helmut Aust reflects on the role of law in this discourse. The answer one might give to the question of decoupling citizenship from the state would arguably also depend on one’s disciplinary perspective. It is easier to think outside of the box from the perspective of political theory, political philosophy, and history than it is from the perspective of the law. Continue reading >>
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28 January 2020

A Trial that Wasn’t, an Impact that Was

The handling of the Sadurski cases offers a pars pro toto picture of the dynamics, twists and (sub)plots in a slide to authoritarianism under our very eyes. It speaks for many other similar cases that do not benefit from equally intense coverage. It shows that what is at play in these politically motivated trials is a mixture of obfuscation, an attempt at a long-game strategy facilitated by unlimited resources (paid by the Polish taxpayer) and an expectation that international (scholarly and other) attention spans will break – and support will dwindle accordingly. Continue reading >>

Urban Agglomeration, Constitutional Silence

Urban citizenship is a bold and intriguing idea, regardless of whether we envision it as an alternative or as a complement to extant models of state-based membership. However, this concept seems to be slightly off target in identifying the main issue of city under-representation, namely the constitutional non-existence of cities, and more generally, the great constitutional silence surrounding today’s extensive urbanization and the consequent rise of megacities. Continue reading >>
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Is it worth being a Rejtan?

The Rejtan's true gesture – to disagree if something is not consistent with my fundamental beliefs, is it just an act of useless despair? Today I think about it differently. Expressing one's opinion, thoughts, views, even if it does not bring directly any tangible, immediately visible result, it goes far beyond pure symbolism and translates into reality. I have tried to keep this in mind also in my public activity as a judge. Continue reading >>
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The Next Step: Coupling City-zenship to Human Rights

Should urban citizenship be emancipated from national citizenship? Barbara Oomen points at the international human rights framework for three reasons: (1) This is where local authorities are already looking for inspiration; (2) the legal framework of human rights offers an added value in meeting some of the underlying objectives of city-zenship; and (3) it could mitigate concerns legitimately raised in earlier contributions. Continue reading >>
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27 January 2020

The Hungarian “Lex NGO” before the CJEU: Calling an Abuse of State Power by its Name

On 14 January 2020, Advocate General Campos Sánchez-Bordona delivered his Opinion in Case C-78/18 on the restrictions incorporated into a 2017 Hungarian law on the financing of NGOs from abroad. He makes clear that Hungary’s “Lex NGO” not only restricts the free movement of capital but also violates several fundamental rights, and is therefore incompatible with EU law. Continue reading >>
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Local Citizenship Needs Local Sovereignty

What goes underexplored in Bauböck’s commentary is the relationship of citizenship to sovereignty. Alexander Aleinikoff claims urban citizenship is a useful concept only to the extent that urban areas possess legal authority—some form of sovereignty—to rule by and for themselves. Continue reading >>
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Climate Citizenship and the Rural/Urban Divide

Along with several other contributors to this Symposium (e.g., Hase and Lenard), Avigail Eisenberg is skeptical that enhancing urban democracy will help meet the global challenges we confront today. Continue reading >>
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26 January 2020

Mit Mut und Dogmatik die Luftreinhaltung gegen die öffentliche Hand durchsetzen

In seinem Beschluss vom 21. Januar 2020 findet das Verwaltungsgericht Stuttgart Mut und dogmatische Lösungen, eine Zwangsvollstreckung gegen die öffentliche Hand zu verbessern (17 K 5255/19). Es bricht nicht nur mit der Praxis, die das Zwangsgeld letztlich in der öffentlichen Hand belässt, sondern schließt auch eine Zwangshaft gegen Amtsträger als ultima ratio nicht aus. Continue reading >>

The Danger Zone: Charter Cities, Citizenship, and Social Justice

Urbanisation has radically transformed the way that people live, but a corresponding legal and political shift has not taken place. In North America and most of Europe, the power of cities is derived from the sovereignty of the state. Many cities do not have access to the revenue needed to provide for the social welfare and infrastructure requirements of residents. Continue reading >>
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What the Bremen Town Musicians Tell Us about Citizenship’s Potential

Contrary to what Warren Magnusson suggests, Luicy Pedroza finds that non-citizen local enfranchisement is highly important. Continue reading >>
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Polen, die EU und das Ende der Welt, wie wir sie kennen: ein Interview mit FRANZ MAYER

Was, wenn Polen den Konflikt mit der EU immer weiter eskaliert? Was, wenn die PiS-Regierung die vom EuGH gegebenenfalls verhängten Bußgelder einfach nicht bezahlt? Ein Gespräch über europäische Rechtsstaatlichkeitspolitik in extremis. Continue reading >>
25 January 2020

The ‘Sunk Costs’ of Local Citizenship

The urban citizenship discussed in this Forum is not at all new in the Western world; it has a history of at least a thousand years, and when we include Ancient Athens, even much more. This history is relevant because it suggests the scope, as well as the limitations of such alternatives. Continue reading >>
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Local or Urban Citizenship?

In this contribution Johanna Hase highlights two aspects: First, she argues that the framing in terms of urban rather than local citizenship is not helpful, and possibly even counter-productive, for the purpose of constructing the new citizenship narrative. And second, she questions the relation between emancipating urban citizenship from nationality, on the one hand, and the growing competences of local polities, on the other hand. Continue reading >>
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24 January 2020

Aufsichtssache

Es ist nicht oft der Fall, dass sich alle im Bundestag vertretenen Parteien einig sind. Die zuerst in der Süddeutschen Zeitung verbreitete Nachricht, dass die Bundesrepublik Deutschland mit der Türkei ein Abkommen aushandelt, welches die Gründung dreier türkischer Schulen in Berlin, Köln und Frankfurt am Main ermöglichen soll, hat indes Vertreter*innen der Linken über die CDU bis hin zur AFD einhellig die Befürchtung äußern lassen, dass es in diesen Schulen zu einer ideologischen Indoktrination der Schüler*innen kommen könnte. Ein entsprechendes Abkommen wäre jedoch politisch klug und je nach Ausgestaltung würden türkische Auslandsschulen der Schulaufsicht in Bundesländern unterliegen. Continue reading >>
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Mean cities: the dark side of urban citizenship

Stadtluft macht frei, or city air makes you free, was a proverb in the Middle Ages. It referred to a legal principle according to which runaway serfs were to become free after living one year in a city. Today, many scholars suggest that urban citizenship still has powerful emancipatory effects. Continue reading >>
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From De Facto Urban Citizenship to Open Borders

I will take Rainer Bauböck's closing words as my point of departure and offer an answer that is less predictive and normative, and more empirical. I agree with his assertion that we need a robust urban citizenship. I would suggest that we already have some important examples of urban citizenship that challenge and complement national citizenship in crucial ways and it is important to shine a light on those examples to chart a course forward. Continue reading >>
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23 January 2020

EU Rule of Law Dialogues: Risks – in Context

On January 16, 2020 the European Parliament passed a resolution about the state of the Article 7(1) TEU hearings with Hungary and Poland, noting with concern that “the reports and statements by the Commission and international bodies, such as the UN, OSCE and the Council of Europe, indicate that the situation in both Poland and Hungary has deteriorated since the triggering of Article 7(1) of the TEU”. The resolution is a plea for a structured and more meaningful process in which each EU institution would exercise its existing powers in a meaningful and cooperative manner. The resolution emphasizes that the Article 7(1) TEU preventive process is one of risk assessment and one that may have actual – including budgetary – consequences. Continue reading >>
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CSUler in die Container? Oder wie man doch noch zu einem Bundestag mit 598 Abgeordneten kommen kann

Bundestagspräsident Wolfgang Schäuble ist vorerst mit seiner Arbeitsgruppe zur Reform des Wahlrechts gescheitert. Das könnte schon sehr bald zum Problem werden, denn ohne Wahlrechtsreform wird der begehrte Raum im Berliner Regierungsviertel bald knapp. Und so ist Schäubles Ankündigung, künftig Büro-Container aufstellen zu lassen ganz bestimmt nicht als reiner Scherz zu verstehen. Doch so weit muss es gar nicht kommen. Continue reading >>

‘Zombie Urbanism’ and the Search for New Sources of Solidarity

How can ‘staged urbanism’ provide spaces of urban citizenship? Under what conditions can urban citizenship “contribute to overall democratic integration within and beyond nation-states”? Continue reading >>
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Urban Citizenship: A Path to Migrant Inclusion

Earlier commentaries in this online symposium highlighted various aspects of urban citizenship, such as the exclusion of non-urban populations (Lenard) or the conundrum of multilevel frames of legal authority (van Zeben). Harald Bauder suggests that urban citizenship can be an important mechanism to create inclusive communities. Continue reading >>
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Only a Court Established by Law Can Be an Independent Court

In A.K. and others, the European Court of Justice established a detailed method for assessing the independence (or lack thereof) of courts. The judicial independence test laid down by the ECJ, however, may not be entirely fit for the purpose of assessing the lawfulness of courts and judges which are established and appointed on the basis of flawed procedures by bodies arguably violating basic judicial independence requirements as established in EU law. The ECJ appears to limit the required verification under EU law to the issue of independence only. Instead, the reviewing body should, first, check whether the challenged court (judge) is “established by law” and only then, if necessary, follow up on the examination of its independence. Today the Polish Supreme Court has the opportunity to step up and give full effect to that criterion. Continue reading >>
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22 January 2020

Urban Citizenship is About Improving the City – not Just About Letting Foreigners Vote

In a way, the question of urban citizenship is easy. If a state were to give non-citizens citizenship rights with respect to local elections or urban affairs more generally, it would be fully within its powers to do so. As Rainer Bauböck and others have argued, there are many good reasons why a state might want to do so – and just as many reasons to protect the state’s authority to uphold the system of rights as a whole. That said, many issues remain. There is no consensus, and perhaps there never can be on the key terms at issue: state, nation, urban, and citizenship. Continue reading >>
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Lernfähige KI erfordert lernfähiges Polizeirecht

Der Einsatz von künstlicher Intelligenz (KI) im Sicherheitsbereich führt ein bekanntes Paradox vor Augen: Technische Hilfsmittel, die die öffentliche Sicherheit erhöhen sollen, können selbst zur Quelle der Unsicherheit werden und Freiheitsrechte gefährden. Ihr Einsatz muss daher rechtlich eingehegt werden. Dafür reichen weit gefasste Regelungen nicht aus, die neue technische Entwicklungen ohne weitere kritische Erwägungen mit abdecken. Ein technikoffenes Recht allein wird dem Einsatz von KI nicht gerecht. Das Recht muss angesichts des zunehmenden Einsatzes lernfähiger Systeme selbst verstärkt lernfähig werden. Continue reading >>
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What’s the Added Value of Legalising City-zenship?

Josephine van Zeben's response to Bauböck’s reflections on urban citizenship considers some legal implications of the postnational view that Bauböck finds most promising. Specifically, it questions how suited citizenship is – as a legal instrument – for accommodating the concerns raised in Bauböck’s contribution. Continue reading >>
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21 January 2020

Herrschaft über die Verfassung

Die Nachricht kam überraschend. Am Mittwoch unterbreitete der russische Präsident Putin in seiner jährlichen Botschaft an die Föderalversammlung einen Katalog von Vorschlägen zu einer Reform der Verfassung. Und nur fünf Tage später brachte Putin einen entsprechenden Änderungsvorschlag in die Duma ein. Die Änderungsvorschläge wirken aus verfassungsjuristischer Sicht widersprüchlich und kaum durchdacht. Obwohl die Bedeutung des Vorrangs der Verfassung in Putins Rede stark betont wird, zeugen die Ausführungen von einer Geringschätzung ihrer freiheitsschützenden Inhalte und wirken in Teilen gar „sarkastisch“. Continue reading >>
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Zur Korrektur­dauer von Doktor­arbeiten: ein Appell an die Dekane der rechts­wissen­schaftlichen Fakultäten in Deutschland

Die meisten rechtswissenschaftlichen Doktorarbeiten werden binnen weniger Monate korrigiert. Es [...] Continue reading >>

Urban Citizenship Threatens Democratic Equality

It seems urgent that “urban citizenship” is properly characterised to understand not only the rights and responsibilities citizens of cities may well have, but also their grounding. I have no quarrel with this project. However, so far, accounts of urban citizenship – like Rainer Bauböck’s in the piece that launched this forum – do too little to consider the citizenship that is “left over” for those who do not, or cannot, move to cities. Continue reading >>
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City-zenship and national citizenship: complementary and competing but not emancipated from each other

Nir Barak deepens the ambivalence in Rainer Bauböck’s account of urban citizenship and suggests a skeptical but friendly critique towards notions of emancipating urban citizenship from nationality. The relationship between urban and national citizenship should not be seen as mutually exclusive; claims for enhancing city-zenship and decentralizing state power are warranted only insofar as they provide forward-thinking urban response to the decline in democratic participation and civic solidarity at national levels. Continue reading >>
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20 January 2020

The Return of Power-Sharing in Northern Ireland

After three years power-sharing government has returned to Northern Ireland following extensive discussions and the recent publication of a document by the British and Irish governments. It is a lengthy text containing many proposals, plans and initiatives; the relative incoherence is evidence of the conflicting challenges faced. At the core of the dilemma is how to encourage the representatives of the two main communities in Northern Ireland (nationalist-unionist) to share power once again. Continue reading >>

“Gelenkte Demokratie” und der Protest der Gelenkten

Um Wahlkabinen-Fotos zu verbieten, bedarf es einer soliden gesetzlichen Grundlage. Das hat der Europäische Gerichtshof für Menschenrechte heute entschieden – in einem ungarischen Fall, der weit über diese Spezialfrage hinausweist. Continue reading >>