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Individuals in the Constitutional Court: Complaint, Protest, Scandal, and Weapons of the Weak

Constitutions
Comparative Perspective
Judicialisation
Political Activism
Activism
Simon Drugda
University of Copenhagen
Simon Drugda
University of Copenhagen

Abstract

This paper comparatively examines the means for resistance of individuals against the constitutional judiciary. Starting with the case of the Slovak Constitutional Court, the paper critically assesses the different ways in which the Court relates to and interacts with an individual. The relationship of the constitutional judiciary with an individual is not exhausted with access to judicial proceedings. Courts operate at the sharp end of the law, and even though judges may be “armed only with pens,“ by signing a court order, they regularly enforce rules and impose state violence on citizens. Individuals do occasionally resist a constitutional court by way of protest, scandalising the institution or individual judges, and other techniques of evasion. The paper charts these techniques in a comparative perspective.