Abstract
The Constitutional Court of Hungary held that the lack of regulation which provides a name changing procedure for lawfully settled non-Hungarian citizens violated the right to human dignity and the prohibition of discrimination.
Keywords: right to equal human dignity; prohibition of discrimination; right to change the name; gender identity; gender recognition
Published Online: 2021-03-12
Published in Print: 2021-03-26
© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Legitimate and Illegitimate Political Self-entrenchment and Its Impact on Political Equality
- The Constitutional Imaginary: Shared Meanings in Constitutional Practice and Implications for Constitutional Theory
- Notes and Essays
- Writing While Quarantined: A Personal Interpretation of Contemporary Comparative Constitutional Law
- Self-Determination Through Autonomy or Independence? – On the Current and Future Position of New Caledonia
- Names beyond Gender-Based Borders
Schlagwörter für diesen Artikel
right to equal human dignity;
prohibition of discrimination;
right to change the name;
gender identity;
gender recognition
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Legitimate and Illegitimate Political Self-entrenchment and Its Impact on Political Equality
- The Constitutional Imaginary: Shared Meanings in Constitutional Practice and Implications for Constitutional Theory
- Notes and Essays
- Writing While Quarantined: A Personal Interpretation of Contemporary Comparative Constitutional Law
- Self-Determination Through Autonomy or Independence? – On the Current and Future Position of New Caledonia
- Names beyond Gender-Based Borders