Hungarian Journal of Legal Studies 2024/2

  • Szilárd Tattay: Whose rights? Which representation? Conceptual problems concerning the representation of the ‘rights’ of future generations (147)
  • Jarosław Kostrubiec, Mirosław Karpiuk, Dominik Tyrawa: The status of municipal government in the sphere of ecological security (164)
  • Jolita Miliuvienė: How to avoid constitutional court-packing in an era of democratic backsliding: Reflections on the appointment of constitutional judges (182)
  • Amit Upadhyay, Abhinav Mehrotra A case for recognition of caste as a sui generis category in international law (204)
  • Zoltán J. Tóth, Benjamin Flander, Aleksandra Syryt, Norbert Tribl, Kateřina Frumarová, Ján Skrobák: Criminal law protection of state symbols in the countries of Central Europe: Common features and differences (222)
  • Gergely Gosztonyi, Gergely Ferenc Lendvai: Politicians’ liability for Facebook comments. A critical assessment of the Sanchez v. France judgment of the European Court of Human Rights (241)
  • Balázs Bartóki-Gönczy, Mónika Ganczer, Gábor Sulyok: Space sustainability: Current regulatory challenges (260)

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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)

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