P.O. Box 9520
2300 RA Leiden, NL-2300RA
Netherlands
Leiden Law School
legislative process, parliament, legislative scrutiny, comparative parliamentary procedures, consultation, ICT, parliamentary committees, crowd surfing, efficiency of the legislative process, prioritization, fixed term parliament, discontinuity principle, departemental coordination
separation of powers, government, state, democratic legitimacy
political parties, European democracies, party regulation, state, liberal democracy, party systems, Netherlands
Party regulation, freedom of association, freedom of religion, gender equality, passive female suffrage, democratic theory, European Court of Human Rights
Legislative Process, Parliament, Legislative Scrutiny, Comparative Parliamentary Procedures, Consultation, ICT, Parliamentary Committees, Crowd Surfing, Efficiency of the Legislative Process, Prioritization, Fixed Term Parliament, Discontinuity Principle, Departmental Coordination
Legislative process, Efficiency, Transparency, ICT, Consultation, Openness, Participation
Christian Democracy, liberal democracy, Catholic social teaching
religious freedom, state and religion, civil society Catholic and Reformed lines of thought, individual autonomy perspective, Europe, US
religious symbols in public institutions, Lautsi case, positive secularism
religious symbols, public educational institutions, European Court of Human Rights, comparison with high courts of Canada and South Africa, interpretation theory, judicial minimalism, secularity, secularism
religious symbols, freedom of religion, European Court of Human Rights, religious pluralism, judicial minimalism
Political Reformed Party, passive female suffrage, balancing conflicting human rights, state law concerning political parties, procedural and substantive democracy