Abstract
Court, such as prospectivity of law, its foreseeability, clarity etc. The author of the article, former judge of the Lithuanian Constitutional Court and currently the judge of the European Court of Human Rights, examines how the latter court has gradually intensified (not always consistently) its reliance on the rule of law as a general principle, inherent in all the Articles of the European Convention on Human Rights, to the extent that in some of its judgments it concentrates not anymore on the factual situation of an individual applicant, but, first and foremost, on the examination of the quality of the law. The trend is that, having found the quality of the applicable law to be insufficient, the Court considers that the mere existence of contested legislation amounts to an unjustifiable interference into a respective right and finds a violation of respective provisions of the Convention. This is an indication of the Court's progressing self-approximation to constitutional courts, which are called to exercise abstract norm-control.
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CITATION STYLE
Kuris, E. (2018). On the rule of law and the quality of the law: Reflections of the constitutional-turned- international judge. Teoria y Realidad Constitucional, 2018(42), 131–159. https://doi.org/10.5944/trc.42.2018.23654
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