A New Popular Front, or, on the Role of Critical Jurisprudence under Neo-Authoritarianism in Central-Eastern Europe

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6069.89.03

Keywords:

neo-authoritarianism, constitutional crisis, rule of law, critical jurisprudence, populism

Abstract

The current decade brought a neo-authoritarian wave to the countries in CEE. This process, which in certain respects runs parallel to the populist upsurge in Western countries, has its own specificity. Firstly, by focusing on the clash between “elites” and “the people”, it rekindles – in a displaced, right-wing form – the class conflict which before 1989 was an ideological staple in CEE countries. Secondly, insofar as neo-authoritarianism in CEE has often a distinctly neo-liberal agenda shadowed by declarative anti-globalism and national chauvinism, it warps the field of political struggle. Thirdly, in the neo-authoritarian turn law becomes the crucial field of ideological fight, principally in those countries where populists came to power. In this respect, new governments in CEE resort to a blend of old Fascist tools (such as dismantling of constitutional control and denying the primacy of international law) and new inventions (such as the effective state of exception in some areas of law in Poland introduced in 2015–18). The role of critical jurisprudence in CEE is therefore particularly significant and difficult. The paper argues that liberal jurisprudence, although actively engaged in analysing neo-authoritarianism, does not possess adequate conceptual tools for full success. Therefore critical jurisprudence should urgently take part in explaining neoauthoritarianism in the legal field.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Ágh, Attila. 2017. “The EU Polycrisis and Hard Populism in East-Central Europe: From the Copenhagen Dilemma to the Juncker Paradox”. Politics in Central Europe 13(2/3): 7–32.
Google Scholar

Azmanova, Albena. 2013. “The Crisis of Europe: Democratic Deficit and Eroding Sovereignty – Not Guilty”. Law and Critique 24: 23–38.
Google Scholar

Bonelli, Matteo. 2018. “A Federal Turn? The European Union’s Response to Constitutional Crises in the Member States”. Perspectives on Liberalism 10(1): 41–70.
Google Scholar

Broszat, Martin. 1969. Der Staat Hitlers: Grundlegung und Entwicklung seiner inneren Verfassung. München: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag.
Google Scholar

Bugaric, Bojan. Alenka Kuhelj. 2018. “Varieties of Populism in Europe: Is the Rule of Law in Danger?” Hague Journal of the Rule of Law 10: 21–33.
Google Scholar

The Economist Intelligence Unit’s. 2018. “Democracy Index”. https://infographics.economist.com/2018/DemocracyIndex/ [Accessed: 11 August 2018].
Google Scholar

Gdula, Maciej. 2018. Nowy autorytaryzm. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Krytyki Politycznej.
Google Scholar

Halmai, Gábor. 2014. “An Illiberal Constitutional System in the Middle of Europe”. European Yearbook on Human Rights 14: 497–514.
Google Scholar

Joerges, Christian. Christian Kreuder‐Sonnen. 2017. “European Studies and the European Crisis: Legal and Political Science between Critique and Complacency”. European Law Journal 23(1–2): 118–139.
Google Scholar

Kelemen, R. Daniel. 2017. “Europe’s Other Democratic Deficit: National Authoritarianism in Europe’s Democratic Union”. Government and Opposition 52(2): 211–238.
Google Scholar

Levi, Niel. Michael Rothberg, 2018. “Memory Studies in a Moment of Danger: Fascism, Postfascism, and the Contemporary Political Imaginary”. Memory Studies 11(3): 355–367.
Google Scholar

Mańko, Rafał. Cosmin Cercel. Adam Sulikowski. 2016. “Introduction. Law and Critique in Central Europe: Laying the Cornerstone”. In Law and Critique in Central Europe. Questioning the Past, Resisting the Present. 1–15. Edited by Rafał Mańko, Cosmin Cercel, Adam Sulikowski. Oxford: Counterpress.
Google Scholar

Müller, Jan-Werner. 2016. What Is Populism? Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Google Scholar

Oliver, Peter. Justine Stefanelli. 2016. “Strengthening the Rule of Law in the EU: The Council’s Inaction”. Journal of Common Market Studies 54(5): 1075–1084.
Google Scholar

Palombella, Gianluigi. 2018. “Illiberal, Democratic and Non-Arbitrary? Epicentre and Circumstances of a Rule of Law Crisis”. Hague Journal of the Rule of Law 10: 5–19.
Google Scholar

Pech, Laurent. Kim Lane Scheppele. 2017. “Illiberalism Within: Rule of Law Backsliding in the EU”. Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies 19: 3–47.
Google Scholar

Pinelli, Cesare. 2011. “The Populist Challenge to Constitutional Democracy”. European Constitutional Law Review 7: 5–16.
Google Scholar

Poulantzas, Nicos. 1979. Fascism and Dictatorship. The Third International and the Problem of Fascism. London: Verso.
Google Scholar

Saward, Michael. 2010. The Representative Claim. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Google Scholar

Scharpf, Fritz. 2015. “After the Crash: A perspective on Multilevel European Democracy”. European Law Journal 21(3): 384–403.
Google Scholar

Scheppele, Kim Lane. 2015. “Understanding Hungary’s Constitutional Revolution”. In Constitutional Crisis in the European Constitutional Area. Theory, Law and Politics in Hungary and Romania. 111–124. Edited by Armin von Bogdandy, Pal Sonervend. München: Beck, Hart & Nomos.
Google Scholar

Sólyom, László. 2015. “The Rise and Decline of Constitutional Culture in Hungary”. In Constitutional Crisis in the European Constitutional Area. Theory, Law and Politics in Hungary and Romania. 5–31. Edited by Armin von Bogdandy, Pal Sonerven. München: Beck, Hart & Nomos.
Google Scholar

Sulikowski, Adam. 2012. Konstytucjonalizm a nowoczesność. Dyskurs konstytucyjny wobec tryumfu i kryzysu moderny. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego.
Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

2019-12-29

How to Cite

Tacik, P. (2019). A New Popular Front, or, on the Role of Critical Jurisprudence under Neo-Authoritarianism in Central-Eastern Europe. Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Iuridica, 89, 31–44. https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6069.89.03