Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2023/4

  • Tamás Hoffmann: The consequences of the Russia–Ukraine conflict – Introduction to the special issue (487)
  • Gábor Hajdu: The role of ISDS in the Russian–Ukrainian conflict (489)
  • Gábor Kecskés: The protection of nuclear installations in time of armed conflict – Old rules, new challenges (508)
  • Olena Rym, Vitaliy Kosovych: The value of formally undefined norms in the national legislation approximation to EU labour standards: The case of Ukraine (520)

Conference proceedings

  • Péter Mihályi, Iván Szelényi: The war of the Russian Empire against Ukraine: The most dangerous phase of the post-communist transition (536)
  • Péter Halmai: War shock and the economy. Some economic impacts of Russian aggression in Ukraine (545)
  • József Kis-Benedek: The security and military context of the Russia–Ukraine war (560)
  • Vanda Lamm: The war in Ukraine in light of international law (568)
  • Réka Varga: The Russian–Ukrainian war: The possibilities of ensuring accountability (580)
  • Judit Bayer: The European response to Russian disinformation in the context of the war in Ukraine (589)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2023/3

  • Zsolt Ződi: Editorial: Legal technology in the service of access to justice (323)
  • Ricardo Lillo: ICT’s in the Chilean and Latin-American civil justice. Analysis from the right of access to justice (336)
  • Berenika Kaczmarek-Templin: Digital transformation and the traditional rules of civil procedure – Some remarks on the Polish example (363)
  • András Osztovits: Right to a modern trial: A new principle on the horizon of the digital age (377)
  • Dóra Pálfi: Internal dispute resolution systems: Do high promises come with higher expectations? (391)
  • Nóra Chronowski, Boldizsár Szentgáli-Tóth, Bettina Bor: Resilience of the judicial system in the post-Covid period: The constitutionality of virtual court hearings in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic (413)
  • Péter Homoki, Zsolt Ződi: Large language models and their possible uses in law (435)
  • Renátó Vági, István Üveges, Andrea Megyeri, Anna Fülöp, János Pál Vadász, Dániel Nagy, Gergely Márk Csányi: Increasing access to legal information with unsupervised solutions (456)
  • Daniel Necz: Rules over words: Regulation of chatbots in the legal market and ethical considerations (472)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2023/2

  • Mohammad Alipour: The competence of the Security Council over situations or disputes arising from human rights violations by a state under Chapter VI of the United Nations Charter (135)
  • Éva Boda-Balogh: Case-based reasoning as a measure of constitutional adjudication. Remarks on the jurisprudence of the Hungarian Constitutional Court in defamation cases (163)
  • Simone Gianello, Paolo Zicchittu: Constitutional interpretation and populism: A comparison between Italy and Hungary (180)
  • János Kálmán: Decisions with general scope in the light of special sectoral regulations in the Hungarian administrative system (220)
  • Noémi Nagy: “Humanity’s new frontier”: Human rights implications of artificial intelligence and new technologies (236)
  • Patrik Provazník: Values on the horizon: Did the loss of innocence of conflict of laws change the relationship to the foreign? (268)
  • Jan Stajnko, Daniel Siter, Luka Martin Tomažič: Discrimination, freedom of expression and two concepts of liberty: Assessing European legislation criminalizing hate speech (288)
  • Katalin Szoboszlai-Kiss, Gábor Andrási: The best of two worlds: Multidisciplinary co-teaching of legal ethics (308)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2023/1

  • Agnes Lux, Refia Kaya: Editorial: Challanges of children’s rights (1)
  • Gábor Kecskés, Ágnes Lux: There is no plan(et) B – environmental “crossroads’ of children’s rights” (4)
  • Márk Pap: The right to respect for private and family life of children born through international surrogacy in the case law of the European court of human rights (32)
  • Patrizia Rinaldi: The winding access to legal status for unaccompanied migrant minors in Spain (48)
  • Orsolya Szeibert: The voice of the child and the implementation of the child’s right to be heard in parental responsibility matters and cases (71)
  • Anwuli Irene Ofuani-Sokolo, Hadiza Omoyemhe Okunrobo: An examination of the Child’s Right to survival and development in Nigeria – The Boko Haram Insurgency in context (88)
  • Giorgia Brucato: Children after war: From moral development claims to welfare and agency rights (115)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2022/4

  • Marina Bán, Boldizsár Szentgáli-Tóth: Introduction to the thematic section „current Hungarian memory policies in a broader context” (313)
  • Marina Bán: The governance of history via law: An overview (315)
  • Anna Gera, Boldizsár Szentgáli-Tóth: The parliamentary margin of movement for strengthening the role of historical dimensions in interpretation and law-making: The case of Hungary (329)
  • Mónika Ganczer: The impact of historical traditions on the regulation and practice of the preferential naturalization of Hungarians living outside the borders (352)
  • Le Thuc Linh Bui, László Pribula: Using Fintech to protect the strict compliance principle in letter-of-credit law (374)
  • Lenka Dušková, Jan Holas: The role of judges at the pre-mediation stage of court-annexed mediation: A case study of the situation in the Czech Republic (399)
  • András L. Pap: Business and human rights, free speech, surveillance, and illiberalism: Contextualizing academic freedom as a constitutional right and an emerging freedom under international law (416)
  • István Lakatos: A critical evaluation of the work of the UN Human Rights Council, or taking stock of fifteen years without illusions (440)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2022/3

  • Lajos Vékás: In memoriam Attila Harmathy (1937-2022) (175)
  • Bence Kis Kelemen, Mátyás Kiss: The targeted killing of Qasem Soleimani: A case study through the lens of jus ad bellum (177)
  • Tamás Hoffmann: War or peace? – International legal issues concerning the use of force in the Russia–Ukraine conflict (206)
  • Iván Halász: The establishment of the institutional framework of comparative law in the socialist Czechoslovakia and Hungary (236)
  • Ioannis Fasoulis: Navigating the nexus between UNCLOS and the sustainable development goals: Perspectives from transitions in Norway’s ocean governance regime (258)
  • Dániel Szilágyi: Empowering consumers: Towards a broader interpretation of the vulnerable consumer concept in the European Union (279)
  • Asli Alkiș-Tümtürk: Uncertain future of transatlantic data flows: Will the United States ever achieve the ‘adequate level’ of data protection? (294)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2022/1

  • Fruzsina Gárdos-Orosz: Tradition, Constitution, Identity and European Integration (1)
  • Zoltán Szente: Constitutional identity as a normative constitutional concept (3)
  • Maria-Élisabeth Baudoin: Constitutional identity, a new legal Babel in Europe (21)
  • Alain Delcamp: The constitutional identity of the member states: False evidence or constitutive element of a new architecture of the Union? (38)
  • Laurianne Allezard: Constitutional identity, identities and constitutionalism in Europe (58)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2022/2

  • Ernő Várnay: The Hungarian sword of constitutional identity (79)
  • Lencka Popravka: The impact of EU identity on constitutional identities. Romanian and Bulgarian Examples (107)
  • François-Xavier Millet: Has constitutional pluralism ever been tried out?. On the comparative use of Article 4(2) TEU by some constitutional courts (119)
  • Endre Orbán: Constitutional identity in the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union (142)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2021/4

  • Tamás Molnár: The impact of ECtHR case-law on the CJEU’s interpreting of the EU’s return acquis: More than it first seems? (257)
  • Lukáš Novotný: Legal aspects of the prohibition of wild animal circus training: Evidence from the Czech Republic (281)
  • Gergely Csurgai-Horváth: Is it unlawful to favour oneself? (297)
  • András Hárs: AI and international law – Legal personality and avenues for regulation (320)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.

Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2021/3

  • Jitka Matějková, Ondřej Pavelek, Bohumil Vítek: The influence of the Ius-naturale conception of ABGB on the regulation of personality protection and compensation for non-proprietary damage in the Czech Civil Code (185)
  • Sára Hungler: Divergent we fall: The challenges for welfare state – Social integration and unemployment policies in the Visegrad Countries (198)
  • Zoltán Rónay, Márton Matyasovszky-Németh: The effects of neoliberal social policy on the institutional selectivity of the Hungarian K-12 educational system from a socio-legal perspective (216)
  • Zsolt Szabó: Ethnic conciliation in parliaments: Western Balkans v. Western Europe (236)

***

Elektronikusan elérhető itt,

papír formátumban a Könyvtár galériáján.