Karolina Adamová - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Karolina Adamová
Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska. Sectio G. Ius, 2001
Wolters Kluwer Česká republika, 2011
Beiträge zur Rechtsgeschichte Österreichs, 2015
Casopís lékar̆ů c̆eských, Jan 26, 1990
In memoriam Zdeněk Masopust, 2022
The article deals with the history and provenance of statues of Rolands, it points out Rolands in... more The article deals with the history and provenance of statues of Rolands, it points out Rolands in Bohemia and describes their origin and significance
Defi ning a nation brings more diffi culties than defi ning a state... Abstract The authors of th... more Defi ning a nation brings more diffi culties than defi ning a state... Abstract The authors of this article focus on the defi nition of the term "nation". They introduce various defi ni-tions of "nation" off ered by European thinkers, including Czechs. They point out that in the ideas of linguists, historians, and politicians of the Revival and post-Revival periods were picked up by Czech sociologists, philosophers, and political scientists of the 20 th century. The authors also introduce several individual schools of thought that attempted to study the term "nation".
The Lawyer Quarterly, 2015
Authors from many countries have taken interest in the topic of continuity and discontinuity of a... more Authors from many countries have taken interest in the topic of continuity and discontinuity of a state and law. In the Czech Republic it was in particular prof. Václav Pavlíček who worked on this topic in several studies. In Slovakia prof. Josef Beňa offered his views on this topic last year. He divided his monograph into introduction and three parts. In the introduction the author explained from the point of view of general theory of law in detail the meaning of terms legal continuity and discontinuity. He is interested in understanding whether these terms are mutually exclusive or form unity in contradiction. It is clear that the author decided for the latter. However, Beňa in the introduction pointed out that constitutional history of Slovakia is inseparably connected with national statehood. This in particular had Beňa in in mind when he approached the topic of his work and processed it chronologically, i.e. in stages. In the first part, comprising six chapters, he first descri...
The Lawyer Quarterly, 2016
a limited set of situations such as claims to specific social assistance by economically inactive... more a limited set of situations such as claims to specific social assistance by economically inactive EUmigrants or their request of specific social assistance at the beginning of their residence and before they found a job in the host Member State. More importantly and contrary to this development, the CJEU keeps strengthening rights and entitlements of those who want to be economically active, i.e. of EU migrant workers and self-employed persons. Thus, regardless of its change of approach in the specific cases Dano, Alimanovic, Garcia-Nieto, the CJEU remains opposed to the restrictions of rights of economically active EU-migrants as they were discussed and promised by EU statesmen at the European Council summit in February 2016. Thus, although it is the CJEU who is now blamed for limiting rights derived directly from EU-citizenship, the ball is now in the politicians' court as they want to intervene in the nature of integration much more than the CJEU ever did in its decisions. Anna Brabcová, a recent graduate of the Faculty of Law, contributed an extract from her diploma thesis submitted in autumn 2015 and dedicated to the topic of "Accession of the European Union to the European Convention on Human Rights. Examining the CJEU's Approach in the Opinion 2/13. The Future of the EU-ECHR Accession Process". Her paper thus continues the debate on the matter of accession of the European Union ("EU") to the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ("ECHR") that has been for decades a hot topic of legal and academic discussions. On the 18 th December 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union ("CJEU") issued its long awaited Opinion 2/13 where the CJEU ruled that the Draft agreement on the accession of the EU to the ECHR is not compatible with EU law. In the first part the paper examines the CJEU's approach taken in its Opinion 2/13. It tries to see its reasoning from a different perspective which could lead to the conclusion that the CJEU is maybe not as selfish as it might seem at first sight. In the second part the paper foresees the development of future steps regarding the EU accession to the ECHR and provides an assessment of the so far offered solutions to get the EU-EHCR accession process out of its current knotty situation.
Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska. Sectio G. Ius, 2001
Wolters Kluwer Česká republika, 2011
Beiträge zur Rechtsgeschichte Österreichs, 2015
Casopís lékar̆ů c̆eských, Jan 26, 1990
In memoriam Zdeněk Masopust, 2022
The article deals with the history and provenance of statues of Rolands, it points out Rolands in... more The article deals with the history and provenance of statues of Rolands, it points out Rolands in Bohemia and describes their origin and significance
Defi ning a nation brings more diffi culties than defi ning a state... Abstract The authors of th... more Defi ning a nation brings more diffi culties than defi ning a state... Abstract The authors of this article focus on the defi nition of the term "nation". They introduce various defi ni-tions of "nation" off ered by European thinkers, including Czechs. They point out that in the ideas of linguists, historians, and politicians of the Revival and post-Revival periods were picked up by Czech sociologists, philosophers, and political scientists of the 20 th century. The authors also introduce several individual schools of thought that attempted to study the term "nation".
The Lawyer Quarterly, 2015
Authors from many countries have taken interest in the topic of continuity and discontinuity of a... more Authors from many countries have taken interest in the topic of continuity and discontinuity of a state and law. In the Czech Republic it was in particular prof. Václav Pavlíček who worked on this topic in several studies. In Slovakia prof. Josef Beňa offered his views on this topic last year. He divided his monograph into introduction and three parts. In the introduction the author explained from the point of view of general theory of law in detail the meaning of terms legal continuity and discontinuity. He is interested in understanding whether these terms are mutually exclusive or form unity in contradiction. It is clear that the author decided for the latter. However, Beňa in the introduction pointed out that constitutional history of Slovakia is inseparably connected with national statehood. This in particular had Beňa in in mind when he approached the topic of his work and processed it chronologically, i.e. in stages. In the first part, comprising six chapters, he first descri...
The Lawyer Quarterly, 2016
a limited set of situations such as claims to specific social assistance by economically inactive... more a limited set of situations such as claims to specific social assistance by economically inactive EUmigrants or their request of specific social assistance at the beginning of their residence and before they found a job in the host Member State. More importantly and contrary to this development, the CJEU keeps strengthening rights and entitlements of those who want to be economically active, i.e. of EU migrant workers and self-employed persons. Thus, regardless of its change of approach in the specific cases Dano, Alimanovic, Garcia-Nieto, the CJEU remains opposed to the restrictions of rights of economically active EU-migrants as they were discussed and promised by EU statesmen at the European Council summit in February 2016. Thus, although it is the CJEU who is now blamed for limiting rights derived directly from EU-citizenship, the ball is now in the politicians' court as they want to intervene in the nature of integration much more than the CJEU ever did in its decisions. Anna Brabcová, a recent graduate of the Faculty of Law, contributed an extract from her diploma thesis submitted in autumn 2015 and dedicated to the topic of "Accession of the European Union to the European Convention on Human Rights. Examining the CJEU's Approach in the Opinion 2/13. The Future of the EU-ECHR Accession Process". Her paper thus continues the debate on the matter of accession of the European Union ("EU") to the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ("ECHR") that has been for decades a hot topic of legal and academic discussions. On the 18 th December 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union ("CJEU") issued its long awaited Opinion 2/13 where the CJEU ruled that the Draft agreement on the accession of the EU to the ECHR is not compatible with EU law. In the first part the paper examines the CJEU's approach taken in its Opinion 2/13. It tries to see its reasoning from a different perspective which could lead to the conclusion that the CJEU is maybe not as selfish as it might seem at first sight. In the second part the paper foresees the development of future steps regarding the EU accession to the ECHR and provides an assessment of the so far offered solutions to get the EU-EHCR accession process out of its current knotty situation.