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In: Heritage
Frontmatter -- Preface -- Foreword / Dawson, R. MacGregor -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I: The Constitution Of Canada -- I. The Constitution Defined -- II. The Flexibility of the Constitution -- Part II. How Past Amendments Were Secured -- III. How Past Amendments Were Secured -- Part III. The Amending Process To-Day -- IV. An Address from Both Houses of Parliament -- V. The Participation of the Provinces -- VI. The Role of the British Parliament -- VII. Conflicting Views on the Amending Process -- Part IV. Proposals For A New Amending Machinery -- VIII. Changes of Procedure Advocated in the Past -- IX. An Approach to the Future -- Appendices -- Bibliography -- Index
In: Universal Law practitioners edition
In: Oxford Constitutional Theory Ser.
Can constitutional amendments be unconstitutional? Using theoretical and comparative approaches, Roznai establishes the nature and scope of constitutional amendment powers by focusing on substantive limitations, looking at their prevalence in practice and the conceptual coherence of the very idea of limitations to constitutional amendment powers.
In: Hart studies in comparative public law v. 17
Amendment power, constituent power, and popular sovereignty : linking unamendability and amendment procedures -- Yaniv Roznai -- Constitutional theory and cognitive estrangement : beyond revolutions, amendments, and constitutional moments -- Zoran Oklopcic -- Constraints on constitutional amendment powers -- Oran Doyle -- Comment on Doyle's constraints on constitutional amendment powers -- Mark Tushnet -- Constituting the amendment power : a framework for comparative amendment law -- Thomaz Pereira -- Siey's The spirit of constitutional democracy? -- Luisa Fernanda García López -- Revolutionary reform in Venezuela : electoral rules and historical narratives in the creation of the 1999 Constitution -- Joshua Braver -- "Revolutionary reform" and the seduction of constitutionalism -- Juliano Zaiden Benvindo -- Constitutional sunrise -- Sofia Ranchordás -- Constitutional change and interest group politics : Ireland's children's rights referendum -- Oran Doyle and David Kenny -- Amendment-metrics : the good, the bad, and the frequently amended constitution -- Xenophon Contiades and Alkmene Fotiadou -- Metrics : the good, the bad, and the frequently amended constitution -- James E Fleming -- Formal amendment rules and constitutional endurance : the strange case of the commonwealth Caribbean -- Derek O'Brien -- Constituting "the people" : the paradoxical place of the formal amendment procedure in Australian constitutionalism -- Lael K Weis -- Hard amendment cases in Canada -- Kate Glover -- The French people's role in amending the constitution : a French constitutional analysis from a pure legal perspective -- Jean-Philippe Derosier -- The implication of conflation of normal and "constitutional politics" on constitutional change in Africa -- Duncan Okubasu -- Direct democracy and constitutional change in the US : institutional learning from state laboratories -- Dr Jurgen Goossens.
In: Oxford constitutional theory
"Can constitutional amendments be unconstitutional? The problem of 'unconstitutional constitutional amendments' has become one of the most widely debated issues in comparative constitutional theory, constitutional design, and constitutional adjudication. This book describes and analyses the increasing tendency in global constitutionalism substantively to limit formal changes to constitutions. The challenges of constitutional unamendability to constitutional theory become even more complex when constitutional courts enforce such limitations through substantive judicial review of amendments, often resulting in the declaration that these constitutional amendments are 'unconstitutional'. Combining historical comparisons, constitutional theory, and a wide comparative study, [the author] sets out to explain what the nature of amendment power is, what its limitations are, and what the role of constitutional courts is and should be when enforcing limitations on constitutional amendments."--