Constitutionalism Under Extreme Conditions: Law, Emergency, Exception
In: Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice 82
In: Springer eBook Collection
Introduction -- Part I: Emergency, Exception and Normalcy -- Chapter 1. From Institutional Sovereignty to Constitutional Mindset: Rethinking the Domestication of the State of Exception in the Age of Normalization -- Chapter 2.Judicial Review and Emergencies in Post-Marcos Philippines -- Chapter 3. Constitution and Law as Instruments for Normalising Abnormalcy: The Sri Lankan and Indian Experience -- Chapter 4. Political Emergencies as Challenges to the Impartiality of Public Law -- Part II: Terrorism and Warfare -- Chapter 5. Human Rights in Times of Terror – A Judicial Point of View -- Chapter 6. Detaining Unlawful Combatants in Israel: A Matter of Misiniterpretation? -- Chapter 7. The Law Governing the Rights of Enemy Aliens' Access to Courts -- Chapter 8. Emergencies and Constitutional Rights in a Time of Terror Threat in the Czech Republic: Do We Need a New Dimension of Emergency? -- Part III: Constitution-Making and Constitutional Change -- Chapter 9. Authoritative Constitution-Making in the Name of Democracy? -- Chapter 10. Again: From 1867 to Today, Making a Constitution Under an Elite Umbrella in Turkey -- Chapter 11. Constitution-Making, Political Transition and Reconciliation in Tunisia and Egypt: A Comparative Perspective -- Chapter 12. Security Sector Reform in Timor-Leste After the Constitutional Exception -- Part IV: Constitutionalism for Divided Societies -- Chapter 13. The Constitutionalism of Emergency: Multinationalism Behind Asymmetrical Constitutional Arrangements -- Chapter 14. The Paradox of Territorial Autonomy: How Subnational Representation Leads to Secessionist Preferences -- Chapter 15. Entrenching Hegemony in Cyprus: The Doctrine of Necessity and the Principle of Bicommunality -- Part V: Public Health, Financial and Economic Crises -- Chapter 16. The 'Judicialization' of Emergency: The Case of the Eurozone Crisis -- Chapter 17. Financial Crisis as a New Genus of Constitutional Emergency? -- Chapter 18. Public Health Emergencies and Constitutionalism Between the National and the International -- Chapter 19. Conclusion.