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GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

2020

Comparative law

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Material Liberty And The Administrative State: Market And Social Rights In American And German Law, Francesca Bignami Jan 2020

Material Liberty And The Administrative State: Market And Social Rights In American And German Law, Francesca Bignami

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

This chapter begins with a forgotten story from American constitutional law. Raymond Belcher worked for a coal mining company in Lynco, West Virginia. During his working life, he paid into the federal insurance scheme for disability—Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). Belcher later broke his neck on the job and claimed on his federal SSDI insurance. But he was in for a bad surprise. In 1965, after he began contributing but before he became disabled, Congress enacted an “offset” provision to reduce benefits for individuals like him who qualified for both state-run worker’s compensation and federal SSDI. Belcher went all the …


The German Right To Fiscal Stability And The Counter-Majoritarian Difficulty: The Pspp Judgment Of 5 May 2020, Francesca Bignami Jan 2020

The German Right To Fiscal Stability And The Counter-Majoritarian Difficulty: The Pspp Judgment Of 5 May 2020, Francesca Bignami

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The PSPP litigation involved the European Central Bank’s (ECB’s) Public Sector Purchase Programme for the purchase of government bonds on the secondary market with the aim, among others, of combating deflation. Although the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) found the PSPP lawful, the German Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) disagreed: On May 5, 2020, the FCC held that the CJEU’s judgment was not binding in Germany and that the PSPP was unlawful and required further ECB action to bring it into compliance with German law.

This article contributes to the growing scholarship on the PSPP litigation by analyzing the …


Order And Law In China, Donald C. Clarke Jan 2020

Order And Law In China, Donald C. Clarke

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

The near half-century of the post-Mao era has almost universally been called one of construction of China’s legal system. But while great changes have taken place in China’s public order and dispute resolution institutions, other things have changed little or not at all. Most commentary focuses on the changes; this article, by contrast, will look at what has not changed—the important continuities that have persisted for over four decades.

This article argues that the scholarly community has accumulated over the past four decades a number of observations about China’s order maintenance institutions that are increasingly difficult to explain using the …