Tytuł pozycji:
Zabezpieczenia konstytucji przed zmianą konstytucji
This article discusses procedural means of protecting the constitution against changes.
The starting point is the general remark that the constitution should be a durable
and stable act, as it is the permanency of any constitution that is its inherent feature.
Nevertheless, any rational legislator of the constitutional system must allow for
the possibility of changing the constitution. However, any implementation of changes
ought to be carried out with caution and only if absolutely necessary. Therefore, the
mode of changing the constitution must be difficult enough (in comparison to passing
ordinary laws) but also accomplishable. Consequently, the procedural side of any change of the constitution must be designed so as to, on the one hand, make the procedures
of amending the constitution possibly complicated, but on the other hand
those procedures must be realistic and implementable. That is why nowadays we can
observe a whole range of procedural solutions concerning the process of changing
the constitution, e.g. provisions relatively unchanged. The prerequisite of obtaining
a qualified majority in the parliament is also a common mechanism in the process
of changing the constitution. Sometimes changing the constitution must be approved
by two consecutive parliaments, but a more frequent solution is a referendum-based
procedure.