Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights

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Standard

Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights. / Aksenova, Marina; Marchuk, Iryna.

I: International Journal of Constitutional Law, Bind 16, Nr. 4, 2018, s. 1322-1346.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Aksenova, M & Marchuk, I 2018, 'Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights', International Journal of Constitutional Law, bind 16, nr. 4, s. 1322-1346. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moy088

APA

Aksenova, M., & Marchuk, I. (2018). Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights. International Journal of Constitutional Law, 16(4), 1322-1346. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moy088

Vancouver

Aksenova M, Marchuk I. Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights. International Journal of Constitutional Law. 2018;16(4):1322-1346. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moy088

Author

Aksenova, Marina ; Marchuk, Iryna. / Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights. I: International Journal of Constitutional Law. 2018 ; Bind 16, Nr. 4. s. 1322-1346.

Bibtex

@article{5ad8bde908d245018a53a2c77adfbfb8,
title = "Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court{\textquoteright}s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights",
abstract = "This article discusses interactions between the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation and the European Court of Human Rights. More specifically, it critically examines evolving legal reasoning of the CC with respect to its interpretation of international law. Furthermore, it reflects on broader implications of the CC{\textquoteright}s recent rulings that reaffirm the primacy of the Constitution of the Russian Federation over the ECtHR judgments in part where they appear to be contrary to the constitutional law provisions. These rulings are anticipated to have a long-lasting effect on the Russian legal system. They reflect a changing relationship between international and domestic law and signal a shift in Russia toward a more autonomous understanding of international law rooted in the principle of sovereignty that differs from the Western narrative of the discipline. Even more broadly, these emerging new interpretations support the idea of fragmentation of international law not only from a strictly legal perspective—as a plethora of conflicting sources of law—but also from a socio-legal perspective as a discipline harboring conflicting narratives.",
author = "Marina Aksenova and Iryna Marchuk",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1093/icon/moy088",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "1322--1346",
journal = "International Journal of Constitutional Law",
issn = "1474-2640",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reinventing or Rediscovering International Law? The Russian Constitutional Court’s Uneasy Dialogue with the European Court of Human Rights

AU - Aksenova, Marina

AU - Marchuk, Iryna

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This article discusses interactions between the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation and the European Court of Human Rights. More specifically, it critically examines evolving legal reasoning of the CC with respect to its interpretation of international law. Furthermore, it reflects on broader implications of the CC’s recent rulings that reaffirm the primacy of the Constitution of the Russian Federation over the ECtHR judgments in part where they appear to be contrary to the constitutional law provisions. These rulings are anticipated to have a long-lasting effect on the Russian legal system. They reflect a changing relationship between international and domestic law and signal a shift in Russia toward a more autonomous understanding of international law rooted in the principle of sovereignty that differs from the Western narrative of the discipline. Even more broadly, these emerging new interpretations support the idea of fragmentation of international law not only from a strictly legal perspective—as a plethora of conflicting sources of law—but also from a socio-legal perspective as a discipline harboring conflicting narratives.

AB - This article discusses interactions between the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation and the European Court of Human Rights. More specifically, it critically examines evolving legal reasoning of the CC with respect to its interpretation of international law. Furthermore, it reflects on broader implications of the CC’s recent rulings that reaffirm the primacy of the Constitution of the Russian Federation over the ECtHR judgments in part where they appear to be contrary to the constitutional law provisions. These rulings are anticipated to have a long-lasting effect on the Russian legal system. They reflect a changing relationship between international and domestic law and signal a shift in Russia toward a more autonomous understanding of international law rooted in the principle of sovereignty that differs from the Western narrative of the discipline. Even more broadly, these emerging new interpretations support the idea of fragmentation of international law not only from a strictly legal perspective—as a plethora of conflicting sources of law—but also from a socio-legal perspective as a discipline harboring conflicting narratives.

U2 - 10.1093/icon/moy088

DO - 10.1093/icon/moy088

M3 - Journal article

VL - 16

SP - 1322

EP - 1346

JO - International Journal of Constitutional Law

JF - International Journal of Constitutional Law

SN - 1474-2640

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 182947354