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Alec Stone Sweet's “Juridical Coup d'État” Revisited: Coups d'État, Revolutions, Grenzorgane, and Constituent Power
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
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With his “highly suggestive,” “thought-provoking” paper, The Juridical Coup d'État and the Problem of Authority, Stone Sweet initiated an ongoing debate. The paper was the object of immediate comments by three eminent legal scholars and of a response to them by Stone Sweet. Most recently, Corrias has developed on its basis a theory of constituent power now. The present article will mostly deal with those aspects of Stone Sweet's paper on which Corrias has relied.
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References
1 Walker, Neil, Juridical Transformation as a Process: A Comment on Stone Sweet, 8 German L.J. 929, 929 (2007).Google Scholar
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4 See, e.g., Walker, supra note 1; Gianluigi Palombella, Constitutional Transformations vs. “Juridical” coups d'État. A Comment on Stone Sweet, 8 German L.J. 941 (2007); Wojciech Sadurski, Juridical Coups d'état – all over the place. Comment on “The Juridical Coup d'état and the Problem of Authority” by Alec Stone Sweet, 8 German L. J. 935 (2007).Google Scholar
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71 This argument, of course, is similar to the one we encountered above when discussing the authority of courts to deviate, in their decisions, from substantive law. See supra text accompanying note 37.Google Scholar
72 Sweet, Stone, supra note 3, at 920.Google Scholar
73 See, e.g., Nipperdey, Hans Carl, Gleicher Lohn der Frau für gleiche Leistung, 3 Recht der Arbeit 121 (1950).Google Scholar
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75 See, e.g., Ipsen, Hans Peter, Das Verhältnis der europäische Gemeinschaften zum nationalen Recht, in Aktuelle Fragen des europäischen Gemeinschaftsrechts: Gemeinschaftsrecht und nationales Recht, Niederlassungsfreiheit und Rechtsangleichung: Europarechtliches Kolloquium 1–27 (1965). The address was given five days before the judgment in Costa v. E.N.E.L. was handed down. Although it is rather doubtful whether this address has, as the speaker used to claim, decisively influenced the ECJ, it doubtlessly shows that the latter's decision was no bolt from the blue.Google Scholar
76 For a wholly different yardstick on the somewhat similar question of whether the European Court of Justice is acting ultra vires, see BVerfG, July 6, 2010, docket number 2 BvR 2661/06 (Ger.), available at Juris (“[T]he Court of Justice has a right to tolerance of error.”).Google Scholar
77 See supra notes 75–78 and accompanying text.Google Scholar
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79 Sadurski, supra note 4, at 937.Google Scholar
80 Walker, supra note 1, at 93132; Sadurski, supra note 4, at 939; Cossias, supra note 2, at 1569.Google Scholar
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86 This is also the answer to Stone Sweet's question why European doctrinal authorities spend a great deal of time asking whether important decisions have been decided correctly. See Sweet, Stone, supra note 5, at 948.Google Scholar
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99 See Sweet, Stone, supra note 3, at 923. The CC has continued that practice under the new procedure of the question prioritaire de constitutionnalité. See, e.g., Conseil constitutionnel [CC] [Constitutional Court] decision No. 2010-25DC, Sept. 16, 2010, J.O. 16847 (Fr.).Google Scholar
100 Certain inroads into that domaine réservé of the Member States appear to be made in the context of the EU's accession to the European Court of Human Rights with the possibility of the prior involvement of the European Court of Justice. Steering Committee for Human Rights, Report to the Committee of Ministers on the Elaboration of Legal Instruments for the Accession of the European Union to the European Convention on Human Rights 5 (2011), available at http://www.coe.int/t/dghl/standardsetting/hrpolicy/cddh-ue/CDDH-UE_MeetingReports/CDDH_2011_009_en.pdf.Google Scholar
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104 Corrias refers to Emannuel-Joseph Sieyès's What Is the Third Estate ? (1963). Corrias, supra note 2, at 1558.Google Scholar
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109 Id. at 1561.Google Scholar
110 Id. at 1560.Google Scholar
111 Id. at 1557.Google Scholar
112 Id. at 1565. But Stone Sweet argues that “in the three cases identified, the judges did not bother themselves much with legal text or precedent.” Stone Sweet, supra note 5, at 951. In any case, this kind of supposed paradox is inherent at least in all decisions in hard cases. See András Jakab, What Makes a Good Lawyer? Was Magnaud Indeed Such a Good Judge?, 62 Zeitschrift für öffentliches Recht 275, 279 (2007).Google Scholar
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