
doi: 10.1093/ajcl/avy033
The Italian Constitutional Court is neither deeply studied nor particularly well known in comparative legal scholarship, despite being one of Europe’s most active, important, and oldest (since 1956) constitutional courts, preceded only by the Austrian and the Czechoslovakian courts set up shortly after the end of the First World War. Its oral arguments are very formal, usually rather boring, and its decisions are written in a language not particularly accessible to much of the rest of the world. Only very recently did the Constitutional Court begin translating into English a select number of decisions, now available on its official website, though generally only...
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