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This volume discusses the constitutional models of emergency and human rights protection in each of the Visegrad (V4) countries and illustrates how these models and the general framework of rights protection materialised in the limitations of the selected human rights during the COVID-19 pandemic.
List of contents
States of emergency and fundamental rights in books and in actions: the Visegrad countries and the COVID-19 pandemic;
Part I: Models of states of emergency in Visegrad countries; 2. States of emergency in Hungary; 3. States of emergency in Poland: A model under construction?; 4. Models of states of emergency in Slovakia and their political context: "We'll manage...somehow?";
Part II: Models of human rights protection in Visegrad countries; 5. he normative standards of human rights protection in normalcy and in emergency in Hungary; 7. Human rights in states of emergency: Constitutional principles and their application in the Republic of Poland; 8. A widening gap? Fundamental rights and states of emergency in Slovakia;
Part III: Restrictions on human rights in times of COVID-19 pandemic; 9. Emergency as a pretext for restricting political rights - the Hungarian autocratic regime at work; 10. Restrictions on the freedom of assembly: The case of Poland; 11. Disproportionate restrictions on the freedom of movement: The Slovak Republic during the COVID-19 pandemic; 113. Restrictions on the right to a fair trial in Poland during the COVID-19 pandemic
About the author
Monika Florczak-W¿tor is Professor in the Constitutional Law Department of Jagiellonian University, Director of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Constitutional Studies of Jagiellonian University, and Director of the Interdisciplinary PhD programme 'Society of the Future' at the Jagiellonian University Doctoral School in Social Sciences, Poland.
Fruzsina Gárdos-Orosz is Director and Research Professor of the Institute for Legal Studies, HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest and also Professor in Constitutional Law at the ELTE Law School, Hungary.
Jan Malí¿ is Research Fellow at the Institute of State and Law of the Czech Academy of Sciences. He is also a member of the Commission for EU Law at the Legislative Council of the Cabinet, an advisory body to the Czech Cabinet (Prague), the Steering Committee of the Centre francais de recherche en sciences sociales (CEFRES, Prague) and of the PhD Advisory Committee at the Charles University Faculty of Law, Prague, Czech Republic.
Max Steuer is Associate Professor at O.P. Jindal Global University, Jindal Global Law School, India, and Assistant Professor at Comenius University in Bratislava, Department of Political Science, Slovakia.