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This collection identifies and discusses the connections between human dignity and democracy from theoretical, substantive, and comparative perspectives. Drawing on detailed analyses of national and transnational law, it provides timely insights into uses of human dignity to promote and challenge ideas of identity and solidarity. Highlighting human dignity’s significance for inclusive democracy, the book’s thirteen chapters underline how threats to human dignity can also be a danger to democracy itself. Critical analysis of the commitment to protect the dignity of all human beings following the rise of nationalism, illiberalism and identity politics are thoroughly reviewed. The volume further addresses urgent questions about today’s democratic societies in the context of Europe’s multiple crises. Written in an accessible style, this innovative book will be an excellent resource for both scholars of human dignity and human rights law, European law and politics, as well as non-experts looking to further their understanding of the topic.
Edited by Daniel Bedford, Senior Lecturer, Portsmouth Law School, University of Portsmouth, Catherine Dupré, Associate Professor, Law School, University of Exeter, UK, Gábor Halmai, Professor Emeritus, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary and Panos Kapotas, Senior Lecturer, Portsmouth Law School, University of Portsmouth, UK
Contents:Introduction to Human Dignity and Democracy in Europe 1Daniel Bedford and Catherine DupréPART I THEORETICAL FRAMEWORKS1 Judicial activity/democratic activity: the democratisingeffects of dignity 19Erin Daly2 Human dignity and democracy in Europe: commitments,connections and red lines 36Catherine Dupré3 Subsidiarity and human dignity: democracy, authority andknowledge 60Stephen Riley4 Democratic transformations in the United Kingdom: thepotential of human dignity 77Daniel BedfordPART II IDENTITY5 On the dilemma between human dignity and national identity 103Cesare Pinelli6 Human dignity as status politics 119Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez7 The right to citizenship and human dignity 137Maria Dicosola8 Discourses of collective dignity, the state of exception andthe twilight of the rule of law: the case of Poland and beyond 155Przemyslaw TacikPART III SOLIDARITY9 The decline of human dignity and solidarity through themisuse of constitutional identity: the case of Hungary since 2010 177Gábor Halmai and Nóra Chronowski10 Bringing human dignity back to life: the case of austeritymeasures in a comparative perspective 200Antonia Baraggia11 Dignity at the margins: the contestatory dynamic of theprinciple of human dignity 225Cólm Ó CinnéideConclusion: human dignity and the future of European democracy 248Gábor Halmai and Panos KapotasIndex
‘Dignity and democracy are preferred topics of comparative constitutional research. But surprisingly enough, the connections between the two concepts have not yet been explored in academic writing. This book puts an end to that situation and opens a new perspective on two pillars of modern constitutionalism.’
Gábor Halmai, Marie-Pierre Granger, Filippo Fontanelli, Amedeo Arena, Koen Lemmens, Renáta Uitz, András Sajó, Kenneth R. Stevens, Lee J. Strang, Howard Schweber, Barry Sullivan, Brett G. Scharffs, Nicholas Aroney, James Stellios, Csongor István Nagy