Doris König
Der Rechtsstaat in der Krise – Was tun?

Thyssen Lectures 2017 – 2021, dreisprachige Ausgabe (Deutsch, Neugriechisch, Englisch), 127 Seiten
Verlag der Buchhandlung Klaus Bittner, 2024, 12,- €
ISBN: 978-3-926397-61-4

With the „Thyssen Lectures“ the Fritz Thyssen Foundation is continuing a tradition that is initiated beginning in Germany in 1979 and followed by venues at a series of universitites in the Czech Republic, Israel, the Russian Republic and, most recently, in Turkey. The series in Greece is being organised for a period of four years under the leadership of Prof. Vassilios Skouris, former President of the European Court of Justice and current Director of the Centre of International and European Economic Law (CIELL), and is dedicated to the framework topic of „the EU as a community of European law and values“. The series in Greece is being organised for a period of four years under the leadership of Prof. Vassilios Skouris, former President of the European Court of Justice and current Director of the Centre of International and European Economic Law (CIELL), and is dedicated to the framework topic of „the EU as a community of European law and values“.

THE CRISIS OF THE STATE GOVERNED BY THE RULE OF LAW – WHAT TO DO?
In a liberal constitutional state, rule of law and democracy are two sides of the same coin. In a democracy as well, freedom requires state power to be constrained by law and action by the state to be subject to checks and controls by autonomous and impartial courts of law. In some EU Member States, the rule of law is being undermined, with governing elites citing the democratically legitimised rule of the majority as pretext. In the process, state institutions empowered with exercising checks and controls, such as courts of law, law enforcement agencies, police and intelligence services, are forced to tow the line, while key positions are filled with their own cronies. The EU has taken a number of steps to counteract this development. These include, in particular, case law handed down by the ECJ laying down requirements governing the independence of Member State courts. Although these measures are now having an impact, the crisis afflicting rule of law and democracy can ultimately only be resolved politically. Above all, the political will of the remaining Member States and a commitment on the part of their respective civil society are needed to preserve the EU as a community of law and values.
Autorenportrait

Prof. Dr. Doris König, born in Kiel in 1957. Studied law at Christian-Albrechts-Universität (Kiel), 1982 awarded Master of Comparative Law, University of Miami School of Law, 1989 awarded Dr. jur. degree (CAU Kiel), 1998 Habilitation (CAU Kiel), Venia legendi for Public Law, General Theory of State, International and European Law. 2000 Appointed professor at Bucerius Law School, Hamburg. 2004–2014 Member of the Advisory Council on International Law, German Federal Foreign Office. 2007–2015 Member of the board of the German Academic Scholarship Foundation (Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes). Since 2008 German Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague. 2012–2014 Dean, Bucerius Law School, Hamburg. Since June 2014 Justice of the Federal Constitutional Court. Since June 2020 Appointed Vice-President of the Federal Constitutional Court and presiding Justice of the Second Senate.

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