02748nam a2200349 a 4500001001400000003000400014008003100018020001500049020001800064020001800082039006600100041000800166099001000174100003300184245010800217260003300325300001100358505004100369505010100410505007900511505011500590505006400705505010200769505008100871505009600952505040901048520080201457650004802259856006702307942000702374999001702381vtls000079128MTX160715 001 0 eng d a1849463859 a9781849463850 a9781782252443 9a201607151140bstaffc201607151132dstaffy201605041224zadmin0 aeng aEbook1 ade Visser, Maartje..9115378 aConstitutional review in Europe :ba comparative analysis/h[electronic resource] /cMaartje de Visser. bHart Publishing Ltd.,c2013. a528 p.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttIntroduction.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 1: The Role of Non-Judicial Actors in Upholding the Constitution.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 2: The Rise of Constitutional Adjudication.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 3: Purposes of Constitutional Adjudication and Access to Constitutional Courts.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 4: The Constitutional Bench.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 5: Identifying the Sources of Standards for Constitutional Review.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 6: Testing and Remedying Unconstitutionality.0 gChapter, Lesson, ParttChapter 7: Interplay between Constitutional Courts and Other Actors.0 aCover, Title,Constitutional review in Europe : a comparative analysis--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Acknowledgements--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Contents--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Table of Cases--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Table of European Treaties and European Legal Instruments--Preface, Introduction, TOC,Table of Statutes--References, Appendix, Index,Bibliography--References, Appendix, Index,Index. a[Auto Generated] Introduction In Marbury v Madison ,one of the most famous decisions handed down by the United States Supreme Court ,Chief Justice Marshall characterised the US constitution as the ‘fundamental and paramount law of the nation ’.1 Today ,his description is accepted as a truism ,not just in the United States but also in the European legal tradition .2 Constitutions are considered the supreme ‘law of the land ’because they enable government ,set out its powers ,duties and responsibilities and provide for limitations ,typically in the form of a catalogue of individual rights .Further ,constitutions have symbolic or political value .They can be seen as ‘bearers of particular conceptions of national identity ’.3 ‘A constitution is a nation ’s autobiography ... 0aConstitutional & Administrative Law911536140uhttp://portal.igpublish.com/iglibrary/search/HARTB0000855.html c10 c75692d75692