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The Return of the Huron, or Naïve Thoughts on the Handling of Article 267 TFEU by Constitutional Courts when Referring to the Court of Justice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Extract
He was a Huron, but a particular one. Lulled during his childhood by the stories of the public law teacher of his Tribe who had the chance to get a scholarship enabling him to mix with intricacies of the French recourse for misuse of power—a real first!—he had seen some of his friends cross the Ocean.
- Type
- Part Five
- Information
- German Law Journal , Volume 16 , Issue 6: Special issue – Preliminary References to the Court of Justice of The European Union by Constitutional Courts , December 2015 , pp. 1701 - 1726
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2015 by German Law Journal GbR
References
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3 Rivero, Jean (1910-2001) was one of the most prominent French Professors of administrative and constitutional law. In his chronicle, mentioned above and widely known among French legal scholars, he brilliantly stages a fictional dialogue between himself and a Huron for the sake of discussing the French recourse for misuse of power. The falsely naive remarks attributed to the Huron indeed provides a forum for calling into question, or at least raising the issue of, the real effectiveness of this recourse. This method has clearly inspired this present article.Google Scholar
4 For convenience, we will refer throughout to Article 267 TFEU, even for preliminary references sent to the CJEU prior to the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon.Google Scholar
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17 The inventory of the decisions to submit a reference for a preliminary ruling of the Constitutional Courts was closed on 20 January 2015.Google Scholar
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