14 research outputs found

    in keeping with the spirit of the albertine statute constitutionalisation of the national unification

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    This chapter deals with the difficult process of constitutionalisation which characterised Italian Unification. Constitutionalisation is a long-term phenomenon which had the purpose of giving constitutional forms to the Nation. The promulgation of the Albertine Statute is more the start than the arrival of this phenomenon. The focus of this investigation is, therefore, to study the Constitution through its evolution paying particular attention to the process of legal integration within the structures of the Albertine Statute and to the amendment mechanisms of the constitutional text. The preamble of the Albertine Statute speaks of «perpetual and irrevocable fundamental law». The word «perpetual» meant the prohibition of revoking constitutional concession, while the word «irrevocable» was intended as a pact between the Sovereign and the Nation. Over the years, very few were the changes to the letter of the Albertine Statute. The interpretation and the practice represented the most important mechanisms of constitutional change (implicit constitutional changes). A primary role was acknowledged to non-written norms. In this perspective, it may well be said that the Italian Constitution consisted in something more than the written text and dwelt in the spirit and not in the letter of the Albertine Statute

    Investment Arbitration and the Law of Countermeasures

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    State Sovereignty: Balancing Effectiveness and Legality/Legitimacy

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    This contribution seeks to explain why territorial entities formed in violation of fundamental norms of international law are not completely ignored by this legal system. The reason for this is not only to be found in functionalism or in the structural characteristics of the order itself. The quest for justice also plays an important role, and effectiveness is needed to promote criteria of legality, protect human rights, and defend the most vulnerable

    Individualizing State Responsibility: Concurrent Attribution and Legal Consequences

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