Cover von: Weniger Staat wagen
Andreas Kulick

Weniger Staat wagen

Rubrik: Abhandlungen
Jahrgang 145 (2020) / Heft 4, S. 649-703 (55)
Publiziert 09.06.2021
DOI 10.1628/aoer-2020-0028
Normalpreis
  • Artikel PDF
  • lieferbar
  • 10.1628/aoer-2020-0028
Beschreibung
ectly, i. e. by way of holding the state accountable to balance the fundamental rights interests of individual, particularly when state courts decide over private relations. The German Federal Constitutional Court as well as the vast majority of German public and private law literature contend that only such state-centered position respects personal autonomy and is in accordance with the Grundgesetz. However, this piece asserts that the opposite is the case. Not only can the direct application of fundamental rights be construed in a way that it conforms with the German constitution, closer scrutiny reveals that it is rather the doctrine of indirect effect that leads to less autonomy, personal and political. Indeed, as recent case law demonstrates, the prevalent view has to treat private actors like the state in order to take into account private power imbalances. It thus leads to etatization instead of personal freedom, whereas the direct application of fundamental rights allows for more autonomy and for better balancing the conflicting interests of both sides. In conclusion, the article calls for abandoning the state-centered view and promotes a position that warrants personal and political autonomy while responding adequately to socio-economic imbalances in private relations.