30430 - LAW - MODULE 1 (PUBLIC LAW)
WBB
Department of Law
Course taught in English
Course Objectives
The main purpose of this course is to provide students with an advanced introduction to comparative constitutional law.
Course Content Summary
- General Introduction: sources of law, constitutions, constitutional amendments constitutional statutes, ordinary statutes, law decrees, legislative decrees and delegated legislation, bye-laws and regulations.
- Forms of State and Transitions to Democracy. Forms of Government. Electoral laws.
- Federalism, Regionalism and Devolution in a comparative context.
- Constitutional Justice: composition, role and functions of Constitutional and Supreme Courts. The fundamental aspects of American and European models of constitutional review. Classification of Court judgments and analysis of decision-making techniques.
- The legal system of the European Union: system of legal sources and the relationship between European law and domestic legislation; the institutional structure; the evolution of the case law of the CJEU and domestic courts.
- Political, economic and civil rights and related safeguards in a comparative context.
- Class-specific special part that shall indicated to students at the beginning of the course by the class instructor.
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
- The common assessment method for all classes is an end-of-term written exam consisting of 40 multiple choice questions and 1 short essay. The end-of-term exam format is the same for attending and non-attending students, but the content is different (see above). Other assessment methods for attending students are class-specific and explained in detail at the beginning of the semester.
- Please note that there is only one written final exam every academic year at the end of the course semester; students have to sit oral exams in all other sessions. Students from previous academic years can only sit the written or oral exam as non- attending students.
Textbooks
For attending students
- A workbook with articles, cases and other material is put on the Blackboard platform at the beginning of the course.
- G.F. FERRARI (ed.), Introduction to Italian Public Law, Milano, Giuffrè, 2008, all chapters.
Last change 14/06/2017 11:52