Renata Uitz started teaching comparative constitutional law at CEU in 2001 and became a professor of law in 2009. Since August 2023 she has been a senior research fellow at the Democracy Institute.
Her major research interests lie in transition to and from constitutional democracy, the protection of individual autonomy and religious liberty. Her current work focuses on illiberal constitutional practices in the European Union and the normalization of illiberal constitutionalism around the world.
As a co-PI in the multidisciplinary research network investigating the origins and iterations of illiberal constitutionalism in East Central Europe, funded by the Volkswagen Stiftung (2021-25), her work traces the emergence of illiberal Christian democracy in the EU on the heels of domestic constitutional and policy changes. She is a member of the CEU Democracy Institute team on the Jean Monnet Network called PROSPER (Project to Research Opportunities to Strengthen Prosperity and Economic Resilience in the EU), coordinated by the Dublin City University Brexit Institute & Dublin European Law Institute. Previously she was a co-PI in the Jean Monnet Network BRIDGE that explored how four intersecting crises (including Brexit and the rule of law crisis) shape the European Union and is a co-PI in a CIVICA project on Religion, Illiberal Constitutionalism and the Retrogression of Fundamental Rights in East Central Europe (ReLiCon).
Her most recent book publication is the Routledge Handbook of Illiberalism, co-edited with Andras Sajo and Stephen Holmes (Routledge 2021). Her other recent books include The Constitution of Freedom: An Introduction to Legal Constitutionalism (OUP 2017) and the co-edited volume Critical Essays on Human Rights Criticism (Eleven 2020).
Her earlier research in comparative public law covered a wide range of subjects on transition to constitutional democracy, including transformative constitutional adjudication, transitional justice and the rule of law, and the accession of post-communist member states to the EU. She published extensively on the protection of individual autonomy, including LGBTQ+ rights and religious freedom. Her work in comparative public law has a global reach and reflects a strong commitment to inter-discriplinarity.
Previously she served as co-director of the Democracy Institute (February 2022 – August 2023), chair (director) of the Comparative Constitutional Law program (2007-20), founding co-director of the Clinical Specialization and as head of the Department of Legal Studies (2012-15, 2018-20). Between 2013-2021 she was co-director of the annual CEU summer course on Constitution-building in Africa.