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Full-Text Articles in Law
Transnational Constitution-Making: The Contribution Of The Venice Commission On Law And Democracy, Paul Craig
Transnational Constitution-Making: The Contribution Of The Venice Commission On Law And Democracy, Paul Craig
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Commission for Democracy through Law, better known as the Venice Commission. While part of the Council of Europe, the Venice Commission is much less understood than the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), notwithstanding the existing literature. This chapter therefore seeks to explicate and evaluate. It begins by explicating the organizational foundations of the Venice Commission, followed by analysis of its remit and role. The focus then shifts to triggering and working methodology.
The remainder of the article is concerned with evaluation of the Commission’s role in relation to constitution-making as broadly conceived, the analysis being situated within the literature …
Unpopular Constitutionalism, Mila Versteeg
Unpopular Constitutionalism, Mila Versteeg
Indiana Law Journal
Constitutions are commonly thought to express nations’ highest values. They are often proclaimed in the name of “We the People” and are regarded—by scholars and the general public alike—as an expression of the people’s views and values. This Article shows empirically that this widely held image of constitutions does not correspond with the reality of constitution making around the world. The Article contrasts the constitutional-rights choices of ninety countries between 1981 and 2010 with data from nearly one-half million survey responses on cultural, religious, and social values conducted over the same period. It finds, surprisingly, that in this period, the …
Misreading And Mobility In Constitutional Texts: A Nineteenth Century Case, Iza Hussin
Misreading And Mobility In Constitutional Texts: A Nineteenth Century Case, Iza Hussin
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
This article explores the case of the adoption of Southeast Asia's first constitution (Johor, 1895) to articulate a fundamental problem of translation-the ambiguity and multiplicity of law's language. Closer attention to this problem helps raise a number of possibilities for rethinking the relationship between law, language, and mobility: firstly, polyphony, dissonance, and divergence in law's language reveals a plethora of political possibilities, audiences, and actors in the making of law; secondly, these ambiguities and multiplicities are integral to law's mobility; thirdly, rather than transmissions of law from center to periphery, law moves in circulations that are iterative, contingent, and patterned. …
A Sociology Of Constituent Power: The Political Code Of Transnational Societal Constitutions, Christopher Thornhill
A Sociology Of Constituent Power: The Political Code Of Transnational Societal Constitutions, Christopher Thornhill
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
This article proceeds from a critical sociological revision of classical constitutional theory. In particular, it argues for a sociological reconstruction of the central concepts of constitutional theory: constituent power and rights. These concepts, it is proposed, first evolved as an internal reflexive dimension of the modern political system, which acted originally to stabilize the political system as a relatively autonomous aggregate of actors, adapted to the differentiated interfaces of a modern society.
This revision of classical constitutional theory provides a basis for a distinctive account of transnational constitutional pluralism or societal constitutionalism. The article argues that the construction of transnational …
The Future Of Societal Constitutionalism In The Age Of Acceleration, Riccardo Prandini
The Future Of Societal Constitutionalism In The Age Of Acceleration, Riccardo Prandini
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
The aim of this article is to reframe the debate on societal constitutionalism and constitutionalization from a spatial to a temporal framework. This analytical shift is due to the dramatic acceleration of societal processes, which are increasingly crossing the spatial boundaries of nation-states and of all the other social structures embedded in peculiar places. This high-speed society is characterized by the so-called temporalization of complexity, which influences every aspect of social life and, in particular, the "validity" of law. On the basis of this theoretical background, I would like to show that changing the form of observation from a spatial …
Private Governance Of Knowledge: Societally-Crafted Intellectual Properties Regimes, Dan Wielsch
Private Governance Of Knowledge: Societally-Crafted Intellectual Properties Regimes, Dan Wielsch
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
The evolutionary challenge global society faces is the decentralized development of legal rules that multilaterally protect social autonomies from violating each other. At the national level, democratic constitutions provide for the resolution of conflicts between different normative worlds, although the focus here is certainly on the protection of autonomies from political encroachment. However, political constitutions make sure that legal orders consider a plurality of normative perspectives. In contrast, international lawmaking can exclusively link to a specific social rationality, lacking any impartial forum for normative reconciliation. This is of special importance for the governance of intellectual resources. The incorporation of international …
Institutional Structure: A Delicate Balance, Paul Craig
Institutional Structure: A Delicate Balance, Paul Craig
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Statutes And Constitutions In An Age Of Common Law, Reed Dickerson
Statutes And Constitutions In An Age Of Common Law, Reed Dickerson
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Constitution Making In 1935-1936, Hugh Evander Willis
Constitution Making In 1935-1936, Hugh Evander Willis
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.