#judges
News
Mexico’s Judicial Reform: Democracy by Ballot or Power by Design?
Mexico is preparing for an unprecedented judicial election. But far from empowering citizens or improving justice, this reform may erode the very foundations of democratic rule. Ana Micaela Alterio explores how a process framed as democratization could entrench power, undermine judicial independence, and usher in a new phase of autocratic legalism.
30.05.2025
Podcasts
Ex-Ministers as Constitutional Judges – In Conversation with Mathias Möschel
Debates about the politicization of constitutional courts are as old as the institution itself. The concept’s originator, Hans Kelsen, emphasized the importance of preventing members of the government and parliament from sitting on constitutional courts, “because their acts are the acts to be controlled by the court.” While this idea is deeply entrenched—at least to the extent that simultaneous membership in the executive or legislative and judicial branches is widely prohibited—the same does not hold true across other temporal dimensions. In his new book Ex-Ministers as Constitutional Judges, published by Oxford University Press, Prof. Mathias Möschel examines the effects—both negative and positive—of this practice, focusing on the constitutional courts of France, Italy, Austria, and Germany.
14.04.2025