Abstract

Abstract In the autumn of 1991 there was an overt ‘constitutional crisis’ in Hungary concerning the role of the president of the republic, a crisis which was subsequently more or less settled. In fact, the whole history of the democratic transition has been a permanent constitutional crisis. The constitution-making process as a method of establishing the fundamental rules of the game in politics and as a constant redefinition of the concept of the state has always been central in the transition. Consequently, the major political disputes have centred on the issue of constitution-making.

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