Loading...

The German Constitution Turns 60

Basic Law and Commonwealth Constitution- German and Australian Perspectives

by Jürgen Bröhmer (Volume editor)
©2011 Conference proceedings 222 Pages

Summary

The 60th anniversary of the German Constitution provided the backdrop for a Conference at the Australian National University on 22nd and 23rd May 2009, bringing together Australian and German constitutional scholars to discuss core features of the constitutions of both countries. The following issues were presented and discussed from an Australian and German perspective respectively: Federalism as both countries are organized as federations; the concept of human dignity which is a central pillar in the German constitutional and legal system but not mentioned in the Commonwealth Constitution at all; international cooperation and integration as a challenge for any constitutional system in the globalised world; the German Basic Law and the Australian Commonwealth Constitution and their important roles in resolving major social conflicts in both societies, the relationship between the various branches of government as a core issue for both constitutional systems, and the concept of free speech or, broader, the freedom of communication as the central and fundamental right and core prerequisite for any democratic system and the history of the Basic Law.

Details

Pages
222
Year
2011
ISBN (Hardcover)
9783631602485
Language
English
Keywords
Constitutional Law Comparative Law Human dignity Federalism
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2011. 230 pp.

Biographical notes

Jürgen Bröhmer (Volume editor)

Jürgen Bröhmer is Professor of Law and Head of the School of Law at the University of New England in Armidale (Australia). After completing his law studies at Mannheim University and a postgraduate European Union Law program at the Europa-Institute of Saarland University he received his doctorate and habilitation at Saarland University in Saarbrücken (Germany) where he worked at the Europa-Institut for several years. He has been in Australia since 2006 with a primary research focus in comparative constitutional, European Union, and public international law.

Previous

Title: The German Constitution Turns 60