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Cover von: Karlsruher Kanones?
Christoph Möllers, Alexander Tischbirek, Ali Ighreiz, Louis Rolfes, Anna Shadrova

Karlsruher Kanones?

Rubrik: Abhandlungen
Jahrgang 145 (2020) / Heft 4, S. 537-613 (77)
Publiziert 09.06.2021
DOI 10.1628/aoer-2020-0026
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Aufgrund einer Systemumstellung kann es vorübergehend u.a. zu Zugriffsproblemen kommen. Wir arbeiten mit Hochdruck an einer Lösung. Wir bitten um Entschuldigung für die Umstände.
Beschreibung
Almost seventy years after the German Federal Constitutional Court's first ruling, it is hardly possible to read every single decision that the Court has published since then. Hence, students and scholars of Constitutional Law and interested citizens alike must increasingly refer to certain (pre-)selections of cases that – for one reason or the other – may or may not represent the Court's case law in its entirety. The present study examines some of these processes of canonization qualitatively and quantitatively by introducing methods of the so-called Digital Humanities into German legal studies. In the first part of the paper, we analyze some of the most well-established case books as well as a study on German Constitutional Law jurisdiction in an influential volume on comparative law in order to identify the »scientific« canon of German Constitutional Law. In the second part of the paper, we turn towards the Court's everyday practice in dealing with its own case law. We do so by relying on a network analysis in a computer-generated citation network of the Court's published senate decisions. Contrasting, both, the external as well as the internal approaches to canonization of the German Federal Constitutional Court's case law, we find that – other than in the United States, for instance – the different selection processes hardly yield divergent results. This is even more surprising as an exemplary qualitative study of some of the most-cited decisions reveals that there are highly varying reasons for a certain case to become »canonical".