European Constitutionalism the Other Way Round
The key argument of the volume is that post-1989 transformation deeply affected states and societies on both sides of the former Iron Curtain and was mutually constitutive. While post-communist Europe had to re-invent itself to be ‘admitted’ to the EU, the old member states and the EU changed too – less visibly, but no less profoundly. This volume examines these transformations from a new perspective, defined by scholars from post-communist Europe, who set the agenda of the volume in a series of workshops. Their colleagues from the ‘West’ were invited to reflect on the experience of their countries in the light of the questions and concerns defined in those workshops. The authors include scholars from a variety of backgrounds: established and young, coming from all parts of the continent and having different views on the politics of European integration. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
Jan Komárek is Professor of EU Law at the University of Copenhagen (on leave) and currently holds the Donatio Universitatis Carolinae Chair (2025–2027) at the Faculty of Law, Charles University in Prague. He was the Principal Investigator of the IMAGINE project (2019–2025).
Birgit Aasa is a qualified lawyer in Estonia and holds a PhD from the European University Institute. She was a postdoctoral research fellow at the IMAGINE project, the University of Copenhagen. She is currently a civil servant in the European Parliament.
Marina Bán has a PhD in Law from the University of Amsterdam and was a postdoctoral research fellow at the IMAGINE project, the University of Copenhagen.
Michał Krajewski holds a PhD from the European University Institute and was a postdoctoral research fellow at the IMAGINE project, the University of Copenhagen. He is currently an inquiries officer at the Office of the European Ombudsman in Brussels.