Judicial Law-Making and Judicial Interpretation in Central European Countries: How Can Courts Strengthen or Weaken the Unity of Law?
“I consider the reviewed collection of studies to be an extremely valuable and noteworthy volume, which will certainly be of interest not only to legal theorists, but also to legal dogmatists and practitioners. The preparation of this book in English by an international team of authors gives high hopes that the book will initiate a much-needed discussion on the law-making by courts and interpretation of law as instruments of ensuring coherence and uniformity of law.”
Prof. dr hab. Monika Florczak-Wątor,Faculty of Law and Administration, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland
“This book is proof that Central European lawyers have abandoned the outdated view that the law is only made by the legislator, while judges serve only as its mouth. At the same time, the book shows that legal scholars from Central Europe develop in an original way various concepts produced by analytical legal science and fruitfully place them in the context of their social environment. This publication has the ambition to appeal especially to readers interested in judicial studies, analytical jurisprudence, and comparative law.”
Doc. Mgr. Marek Káčer, Ph.D., Faculty of Law, Trnava University, Slovakia