The ICCAL Lab

The ICCAL Lab is a collaborative research project between Europe and Latin America that examines democratic resilience from an interregional comparative legal perspective. It brings together researchers who analyze how constitutional frameworks, institutions and social practices can strengthen democracies in the face of current challenges.

Coordinator: Carolina Bejarano

Who are we?

We are a group of 46 researchers from Latin America and Europe, 57 % women and 43 % men, dedicated to the study of comparative constitutionalism and democratic resilience. Half of our members come from each region, which reflects the collaborative and interregional nature of the project.

How do we work?

The project develops legal comparisons both intraregionally (within Europe and within Latin America) and interregionally (between both regions). Its aim is to innovate in comparative law methods and strengthen academic ties between both legal traditions.

Monthly meetings?

We meet once a month in a seminar format to discuss academic texts and research developments related to the project’s themes, following the spirit of the MPIL’s Dienstagsrunden.

Annual conferences?

  • 2025 – Heidelberg

  • 2026 – Bogotá (in the framework of the World Congress of Constitutional Law)

  • 2027 – Heidelberg

Origin and Purpose

The ICCAL Lab is a research and academic cooperation initiative developed within the Ius Constitutionale Commune en América Latina (ICCAL) project at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. Its purpose is to strengthen democratic resilience through the study of comparative constitutional law between Europe and Latin America.

Formation of the Lab

The Lab was created in 2024 through an open international call that brought together 46 researchers from both regions. Half come from Latin America and the other half from Europe, ensuring interregional collaboration and disciplinary and generational diversity.

Structure and Work

Participants are organized into thematic teams dedicated to examining key challenges of contemporary constitutionalism, such as the protection of human rights, the impacts of climate change, or digital regulation. The work unfolds through monthly meetings and an annual conference, where research progress is presented and discussed.

Topics and teams

The ICCAL Lab is structured around ten collaborative research projects, involving academics from Latin America and Europe. Each project explores, from a specific angle, how comparative constitutional law and transformative constitutionalism can strengthen democratic resilience in the face of crises such as authoritarianism, disinformation, geopolitical fragmentation, climate change, and abuse of legislative power.

Colombia and Germany as Archetypical Constitutional Courts for Regional Democratic Resilience

How can two archetypical constitutional courts catalyze democratic resilience?

Digital Challenges to Democratic Resilience

How should courts respond to electoral disinformation and AI-driven manipulation?

REconfiguring State POwers in the 21st Century as a Tool for Democratic Resilience (RESPO)

When do collaboration mechanisms between powers strengthen socio-economic rights?

Courts and Judges: Friends or Foes of Democratic Resilience? (COFFIN)

Do judicial tenure and autonomy protect democracy from erosion?

Democratic Resilience, Climate Litigation, and Intergenerational Justice

Can climate litigation integrate intergenerational justice into democracy?

Transformative Constitutionalism in Times of Geopolitical Fragmentation

Can transformative constitutionalism survive global fragmentation?

From Innovation to Institution: Embedding Citizens’ Assemblies in the Law

When do citizens’ assemblies become constitutional institutions?

Impact Mechanisms for Democratic Resilience in Europe and Latin America

Which mechanisms effectively prevent democratic erosion?

Judicial Independence as a Cornerstone of Democratic Resilience

How can judicial independence remain a safeguard against backsliding?

Abusive lawmaking and democratic resilience in Latin America and Europe

How can courts prevent the misuse of legislative power and strengthen democracy?