Date: 2022
Type: Article
What kind of private law for what kind of Europe? : a rejoinder to Martijn Hesselink’s ‘progressive code’
European law open, 2022, Vol. 1, No. 2, pp. 402-412
MICKLITZ, Hans-Wolfgang, What kind of private law for what kind of Europe? : a rejoinder to Martijn Hesselink’s ‘progressive code’, European law open, 2022, Vol. 1, No. 2, pp. 402-412
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/75396
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Martijn Hesselink’s ‘progressive code’ stands on a century-old leftist tradition. What makes the project unique, however, is the transfer from the nation-state context to the European context and its reliance on principles instead of a fully composed catalogue of rights and obligations. My main criticisms are ultimately the lack of a convincing and fully developed background on both sides of his intellectual construct: the public and the private sphere. Martijn Hesselink has an idealising notion of the public sphere, which he does not yet support with a corresponding EU constitutional theory of the public sphere, and he marginalises society as its own private sphere. The understanding of the public sphere needs to be theoretically and conceptually better grounded in order to be convincing and he would have to recognise that the role and function of the private sphere remain a blind spot in the ‘progressive code’.
Additional information:
Published online: 10 August 2022
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/75396
Full-text via DOI: 10.1017/elo.2022.24
ISSN: 2752-6135
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Sponsorship and Funder information:
This article was published Open Access with the support from the EUI Library through the CRUI - CUP Transformative Agreement (2020-2022)
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