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dc.contributor.authorHALMAI, Gábor
dc.contributor.authorCHRONOWSKI, Nóra
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-26T10:50:28Z
dc.date.available2022-04-26T10:50:28Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.identifier.citationDaniel BEDFORD, Catherine DUPRÉ, Gábor HALMAI and Panos KAPOTAS (eds), Human dignity and democracy in Europe, Cheltenham ; Northampton : Edward Elgar, 2022, pp. 177-199en
dc.identifier.isbn9781789902839
dc.identifier.isbn9781789902846
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/74467
dc.descriptionPublished online: 17 March 2022
dc.descriptionThis is a draft chapter. The final version is available in Human dignity and democracy in Europe edited by Daniel Bedford, Catherine Dupré, Gábor Halmai, and Panos Kapotas, published in 20xx, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/9781789902846.00018 The material cannot be used for any other purpose without further permission of the publisher, and is for private use only.
dc.description.abstractDignity and solidarity are interrelated values in a democratic society, but solidarity is challenged in many ways, even in the course of defining the constitutional identity of a closed society and an illiberal democracy. The chapter reveals on the one hand, how the effective protection of human dignity may trigger the enforcement of social security rights and solidarity. For this purpose, it analyses the more or less good practice of the Hungarian Constitutional Court before 2010, and then against this background assesses the backsliding of solidarity in the post-2010 illiberal regime The chapter also analyses how the packed Constitutional Court rubberstamped the government’s anti-migration legislation after the 2015 refugee crisis against the EU’s relocation scheme. The Court argued that the planned relocation of asylum seekers can result in violation of their human dignity, and at the same time Hungary’s constitutional identity as an ethnically homogenous country. With this the Court also broke away from its previous liberal jurisprudence, which in the early 1990s had established its concept of human dignity as a ‘mother right’, a subsidiary of all rights in defence of individual autonomy, such as self-identity, self-determination as part of the ‘general personality right’. The chapter argues that the Constitutional Court misuses the concept of constitutional identity by cynically referring to human dignity and other fundamental rights, and while doing so devastates both social and European solidarity. With this the Court serves the government’s efforts to dismantle constitutional democracy, and to build up an illiberal system with authoritarian tendencies instead.en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.format.mimetypeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherEdward Elgar Publishingen
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessen
dc.titleThe decline of human dignity and solidarity through the misuse of constitutional identityen
dc.typeContribution to booken
dc.identifier.doi10.4337/9781789902846.00018


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