60 years German basic law : the German Constitution and its court - landmark decisions of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany in the area of fundamental rights / Jurgen Brohme, Clauspeter Hill (eds.) ; edited by Suhainah Wahiduddin
60 years German basic law : the German Constitution and its court - landmark decisions of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany in the area of fundamental rights Jurgen Brohme, Clauspeter Hill (eds.) ; edited by Suhainah Wahiduddin
ชื่อเรื่องที่แตกต่าง
Sixty years German basic law
ISBN
9789839680959(pbk.)
พิมพ์ลักษณ์
Malaysia : Malaysian Current Law Journal Sdn Bhd, 2010.
เลขหมู่
KK4450 S625 2010
ครั้งที่พิมพ์
2nd ed.
ลักษณะทางกายภาพ
vii, 832 p. ; 27 cm.
หมายเหตุ
Summary: The core principle of the German Basic Law - the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Germany since 1949 - is the Rule of Law or the broader concept of the 'Rechtsstaat'. The protection of fundamental rights is one important cornerstone of this principle. As the guardian of the Constitution, the Federal Constitutional Court has shaped these rights through interpretation by a large body of case law. Taking note of the growing interest among scholars not only in continental Europe but more so in the Common Law world, an extensive English translation of that jurisprudence is very timely.
245 00 ^a60 years German basic law :^bthe German Constitution and its court - landmark decisions of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany in the area of fundamental rights /^cJurgen Brohme, Clauspeter Hill (eds.) ; edited by Suhainah Wahiduddin
246 30 ^aSixty years German basic law
250 ^a2nd ed.
260 ^aMalaysia :^bMalaysian Current Law Journal Sdn Bhd, ^c2010.
300 ^avii, 832 p. ;^c27 cm.
520 ^aThe core principle of the German Basic Law - the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Germany since 1949 - is the Rule of Law or the broader concept of the 'Rechtsstaat'. The protection of fundamental rights is one important cornerstone of this principle. As the guardian of the Constitution, the Federal Constitutional Court has shaped these rights through interpretation by a large body of case law. Taking note of the growing interest among scholars not only in continental Europe but more so in the Common Law world, an extensive English translation of that jurisprudence is very timely.