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List of contents
Introduction - Bogdan Iancu and Elena Simina Tănăsescu; Part I Administrative Autonomy and Democracy; 1. Government and Governance: The Constitutional Politics of Institutional Neutrality - Bogdan Iancu; 2. The People, the Experts, and the Politicians: Is Expertise a Challenge to democratic Legitimacy? - Lucian Bojin; 3. Rule of Lawyers or Rule of Law? On Constitutional Crisis and Rule of Law in Poland - Adam Czarnota; 4. Agencification as European Union Acquis - Jacques Ziller; Part II Case Studies; 5. The Impact of National Accountability Agencies on the EU - Elena Simina Tănăsescu; 6. De-politicization by Europeanization: the emergence of the fragmented state in South Eastern Europe - Martin Mendelski; 7. Hungary: Regulatory Bodies in an Illiberal Democracy - Attila Vincze; 8. Independence by Law or by Practice? Taiwan’s National Communications Commission and Central Bank - Jiunn-rong Yeh and Wen-Chen Chang; 9. The State Reform in Brazil: More of the Same? - Gilberto Bercovici; 10. Implementation of Separation of Powers and Scope of Independence of Politically Neutral Organs in Russia - Sergei A. Belov; 11. Independent Regulation in the Contemporary Italian Legal System - Giovanni Frazzica and Antonio La Spina; Afterword: The Need for Independent Regulatory Authorities in the Perspective of Contemporary Constitutionalism - Antonio La Spina;
About the author
Bogdan Iancu is an Associate Professor, teaching in the fields of comparative constitutional law and constitutional theory at the Faculty of Political Science, University of Bucharest, Romania. He has researched at various law faculties and research institutes in Europe and North America and lectured on legal theory and US constitutional law at McGill and Université de Montréal. Iancu’s research focuses on Romanian and comparative constitutional law, EU constitutionalism, history of constitutionalism, and constitutional theory.
Elena Simina Tănăsescu is Full Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Bucharest, Romania. She held visiting professorships at universities in Europe and Latin America, was the representative of civil society in the Superior Council of Magistracy and the Romanian representative in the Agency for Fundamental Rights of the EU and in the Group of Independent Experts on the European Charter of Local Self-Government. Tănăsescu’s teaching and research focuses on Romanian and comparative constitutional law and European law.
Summary
This collection studies the rise of neutral bodies or `independent agencies’ as a challenge to the constitutional paradigm of the nation state.