Dr. Ivo Gruev
Dr Ivo Gruev is a comparative constitutional scholar exploring the role of constitutional histories, texts, and courts within societies and political regimes undergoing transitions from or into authoritarian rule. His doctoral research focused on the interplay between access to constitutional justice and the right-protecting role of "Kelsenian" courts, with a specific emphasis on the constitutional courts of Bulgaria, Hungary, and Germany. Currently, his postdoctoral work is concerned with the changing relationship between governments, courts, and equality rights in backsliding democracies and illiberal contexts. He is particularly interested in the relationship between law and gender, as well as the connections between religion and constitutional identities and interpretation.
In 2023, he received a CIVICA Research grant to investigate religion-based challenges to fundamental rights in Central and Eastern European constitutional courts and the impact of these contestations on judicial interpretation. In 2022-2023, he was also awarded a re:constitution Fellowship to study the constitutional backlash against “gender ideology” in the context of the Council of Europe’s Istanbul Convention.
Prior to joining the Academy for European Human Rights Protection, Dr Gruev was a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Fundamental Rights of the Hertie School in Berlin. He has also held visiting fellowships at the University of New South Wales, hosted by Prof. Rosalind Dixon, and the European University Institute, and has taught at the University of Oxford and Sciences Po.
Dr Gruev holds a doctorate (DPhil) and a Magister Juris (MJur) from the University of Oxford, as well as a law degree (1. Staatsexamen) from the Humboldt University in Berlin. Being interested in the intersection between research and public policy, he has also worked for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the German Parliament, the International Criminal Court, and the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law.
Areas of Research
- Comparative constitutional law
- Equality and anti-discrimination law
- Fundamental rights
- Constitutional courts
- Socialist law
- Law and religion
- Law and gender
- Socio-legal studies / law in context
Publications
Articles
‘Challenges to Responsive Judicial Review in Kelsenian Systems: The Unresponsiveness of the Bulgarian Constitutional Court’ (accepted), Review of Central and East European Law (Brill), 2023 (forthcoming)
‘Constitutionalising Gender in Bulgaria: Deterrence instead of Equality’ for a special issue on ‘Women, Gender and Constitutionalism in Central and Eastern Europe’ (special issue accepted), International Journal of Constitutional Law (ICON), 2023 (forthcoming)
Blog- und Online articles
‘Judicial Resilience as a Systemic Factor for Rule of Law Resilience’, Resilience Observatory on the Rule of Law in Europe (RESILIO) Snapshot Series, Institut for Europäische Politik, 2023 (Link)
’Accountability for Sexual Harassment at the International Criminal Court – The Case of Defence Support Staff’ (co-author) in the Oxford Human Rights Hub Blog, 2019 (link)
‘Domestic Politics, Rule of Law and Legal Reform’ in ’Critical Juncture? Bulgaria after the Snap Poll in October 2014’ (co-authored conference report), South East European Studies at Oxford, St Antony’s College (link)
Chapters
’2019 Developments in Bulgarian Constitutional Law’ (author) in Richard Albert et al, 2019 Global Review of Constitutional Law, I-CONnect and Clough Center (Boston College 2021), pp. 46-50 (link)
’2016 Developments in Bulgarian Constitutional Law’ (co-author) in Richard Albert et al, 2016 Global Review of Constitutional Law, I-CONnect and Clough Center (Boston College 2017), pp. 32-37 (link)
Miscellaneous
Book review: Jiří Přibáň’s Constitutional Imaginaries: A Theory of European Societal Constitutionalism (Routledge 2021) for the Frontiers of Socio-Legal Studies Blog of the University of Oxford’s Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, 2023 (forthcoming)
address
Kerpener Str. 30
50937 Köln
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