Professor Anuscheh Farahat studied law in Frankfurt, Paris and Berkeley. She received her PhD in law from the Goethe University Frankfurt. Anuscheh Farahat was a research fellow (2006 – 2009) and a senior research fellow (2014 – 2017) at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg.
Her book on migrant citizenship and transnational migration in Germany (Progressive Inklusion: Zugehörigkeit und Teilhabe im Migrationsrecht, Springer Verlag, 2014) has received multiple awards, including the Herman-Mosler-Preis 2015 of the German Society of International Law. In 2021 she published a monograph on transnational solidarity conflicts and the role of constitutional courts in comparative perspective with Mohr Siebeck (Transnationale Solidaritätskonflikte: Eine vergleichende Analyse verfassungsgerichtlicher Konfliktbearbeitung in der Eurokrise).
Since March 2019 she is a Professor for Public Law, Migration Law and Human Rights Law at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. Since 2017 she leads an interdisciplinary Emmy-Noether research group on the role of constitutional courts in transnational solidarity conflicts in Europe first at Goethe University Frankfurt a.M. and now at the Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nürnberg ("Transnational Solidarity Conflicts[1]"). The research project is funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft). Also since 2017 Anuscheh Farahat is a Senior Research Affiliate at Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg. In 2022 she was appointed Max-Planck-Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle where she is supervising a research project titeled "JUST MIGRATION: Labour migration regimes in transnationalised contexts[2]".
Anuscheh Farahat publishes widely on issues of European and German constitutional law, German and international migration and citizenship law, international Human Rights Law and comparative constitutionalism.
Contact: anuscheh.farahat[@]fau.de
Selected publications:
Adjudicating Transnational Solidarity Conflicts: Can Courts Ban the Destructive Potential?, in: Mark Dawson (ed.): Substantive Accountability in Europe's New Economic Governance, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023, § 10, pp.217-239.
Contesting Austerity: a socio-legal inquiry, Hart Publishing, 2021 (ed. with Xabier Arzoz).
Transnationale Solidaritätskonflikte: Eine vergleichende Analyse verfassungsgerichtlicher Konfliktbearbeitung in der Eurokrise, Jus Publicum 298 (2021), Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.[3]
Eigentum verpflichtet: Die Sozialbindung des Eigentums am Beispiel des Berliner Mietendeckels, JZ 2020, pp. 603–609.
Integration durch Bürgerschaft: Warum sich der EuGH stärker als Verfassungsgericht verstehen sollte, in: C. Grabenwarter/E. Vranes (eds.), Die EU im Lichte des Brexit und der Wahlen: Faktoren der Stabilität und der Desintegration, 2020, pp. 35–46.
Die Objektivierung des Asylverfahrens aus verwaltungsrechtswissenschaftlicher Sicht: Überlegungen am Beispiel der sogenannten Ankerzentren, Die Verwaltung 52 (2019), pp. 1–27.
The Federal German Constitutional Court, in: von Bogdandy/Huber/Grabenwarter/Shulman (eds.), MP Handbook of Public Law in Europe, Vol. III, 2019.
Der EuGH in der Eurokrise: Eine konflikttheoretische Perspektive, Der Staat 57 (2018), pp. 357–385 (with Christoph Krenn).
Konflikte um Solidarität und Inklusion vor dem EuGH: Zum Bedeutungswandel der Unionsbürgerschaft, in: M. Eigmüller/N. Tietze (eds.), Ungleichheitskonflikte in Europa: Jenseits von Klasse und Nation, 2018, pp. 233–262.
Enhancing Constitutional Justice by Using External References: The European Court of Human Rights’ Jurisprudence on the Protection Against Expulsion, 28 Leiden Journal of International Law 2015, pp. 303–322.
Progressive Inklusion: Zugehörigkeit und Teilhabe im Migrationsrecht, Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer (Beiträge zum ausländischen öffentlichen Recht und Völkerrecht, vol. 246, 2014).[4]