#27 - JRL 2007-189 - JRL Home
From: Alexei Trochev <atrochev@hotmail.com>
Subject: Russia's War Between the Courts
Date: Wed, 5 Sep 2007
Russia's War Between the Courts: The Struggle over
the Jurisdictional Boundary between the Constitutional Court and Regular Courts
By William Burnham and Alexei Trochev
American Journal of Comparative Law, vol. 55, No. 3 (Summer 2007), pp. 381-452
Civil law systems that have established constitutional courts alongside their
systems of regular courts have traditionally had difficulty defining the precise
jurisdictional dividing line between them. This has been a problem in Russia
since the time of the establishment of Russia's first Constitutional Court in
1991 and it continues today with Russia's current Constitutional Court,
established by Russia's 1993 Constitution. The clash between the Russian
Constitutional Court and regular courts has intensified since 1998, when the
Constitutional Court began a campaign to expand its jurisdiction through broad
interpretations of its powers under the Constitution. That campaign continues to
the present day, with decisions as recent as this year claiming even broader
jurisdiction than before. Many of the Constitutional Court's decisions can be
criticized as poorly reasoned and contrary to the letter and history of the
jurisdictional grants set out in the Constitution. This article examines those
decisions and the reactions of the regular court systems to them.
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