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Regressive constitutional erosion: the gradual rescue of the traditional gender order through constitutional interpretation – Regressive constitutional reform: rendering explicit the traditional gender order – Preemption: constitutional supremacy and the traditional gender order as a matter of sovereignty and national identity – Constitutional backsliding or problematic constitutional origins to start with
The rule of law crisis in Europe seen as a gendered phenomenon – The rule of law as a concept is itself gendered – The gendered dimension of democratic backsliding in Central and Eastern Europe is a central, not peripheral feature – Responses to authoritarian populist attacks on the rule of law should also address its gendered elements – Opposition to the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence – The rise of a war against so-called ‘gender ideology’ – Increasingly restrictive reproductive rights regimes – The retrenchment of the ‘traditional’ family and traditional gender roles – EU response weak and ambivalent – European Court of Human Rights’ gender equality case law a work in progress
Populism, gender-related rights and science – The use of medical and scientific concepts and data vis-à-vis populist agendas – Science-related and science-based populism – Science as constitutional bulwark – The role of constitutional review and constitutional interpretation – Science as tool or object of constitutional review – The idea of scientific reasonableness of laws and policies
Anti-immigrant claims as key to the success of populist radical right parties in Europe – Increasing barriers to immigration and integration, and growing uncertainty as migration governance strategy – Misuse of gender equality and women’s rights by populist radical right parties to legitimise the restriction of the access to Europe as legal paradox – Comparative analysis (Finland, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden)