Bulgarian Constitutionalism: Challenges, Reform, Resistance and… Frustration

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Series Details Vol.22, No.2, June 2016, p203-223
Publication Date June 2016
ISSN 1354-3725
Content Type

European Public Law is an English language journal edited at the Institute of European Public Law at the Law School, Hull University. A forum for the discussion of issues in the development of public law, the journal traces the public law of the Member States as it is shaped by the law of the European Union as well as by the Council of Europe’s European Convention on Human Rights.

European Public Law provides a detailed analysis of constitutional and administrative law at a crucial stage of European integration and legal development. In its articles, authorities in the field investigate the extent to which the separate systems of public law in each Member State are, notwithstanding their distinct historical and cultural backgrounds, developing a European Public Law in tandem with the law of the European Union Treaty. The journal also examines the public law systems of new Member States.

Without neglecting the more traditional concerns of constitutional and administrative law, the journal explores the emerging constitution of the European Union and the interplay between law and politics. It is concerned with the identification, examination and control of public power as public and private become ever more intertwined. Public law is given a wide interpretation, including the structure of government, judicial review, the conduct of regulatory bodies, redress of grievance through ombudsmen and administrative bodies, protection of human rights and protection against discrimination, openness and transparency, fiscal and monetary policy, and the role of regulation in the contemporary state and the European Union.

In short, the journal embraces the operation and control of government and government agencies, regulation of economic and commercial affairs and relationships between the state and individuals.For the first dozen year after its adoption in 1991, the Constitution remained unchanged. All political parties have come to accept it as a foundation of the modern democratic state and were busy getting the country out of the economic stagnation that followed the collapse of communism. As a matter of fact, the reforms took in earnest only in 1997, after a severe banking crisis, hyperinflation and the introduction of a currency board. By then Bulgaria was already lagging behind the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, both in terms of economic growth and in their path toward accession to the EU.

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