Vittoria Barsotti, Paolo G.
Carozza, Marta Cartabia,
and Andrea Simoncini
Italian Constitutional Justice in Global Context is
the first book ever published in English to provide an international
examination of the Italian Constitutional Court (ItCC), offering a
comprehensive analysis of its principal lines of jurisprudence, historical
origins, organization, procedures, and its current engagement with
transnational European law. The ItCC represents one of the strongest and most
successful examples of constitutional judicial review, and is distinctive in
its structure, institutional dimensions, and well-developed jurisprudence.
Moreover, the ItCC has developed a distinctive voice among global
constitutional actors in its adjudication of a broad range of topics from
fundamental rights and liberties to the allocations of governmental power and
regionalism. Nevertheless, in global constitutional dialog, the voice of the
ItCC has been almost entirely absent due to a relative lack of both English
translations of its decisions and of focused scholarly commentary in English.
This book describes the "Italian Style" in
global constitutional adjudication, and aims to elevate Italian constitutional
jurisprudence to an active participant role in global constitutional discourse.
The authors have carefully structured the work to allow the ItCC's own voice to
emerge. It presents broad syntheses of major areas of the Court's case law,
provides excerpts from notable decisions in a narrative and analytical context,
addresses the tension between the ItCC and the Court of Cassation, and
positions the development, character, and importance of the ItCC's
jurisprudence in the larger arc of global judicial dialog.