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In: 171 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1
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Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- The Author -- Table of Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- General Introduction -- 1. The Birth and Evolution of Portugal -- 2. Portuguese Citizenship -- 3. Portuguese Sovereignty -- 4. The Portuguese Territory -- 5. Shaping and Evolution of the Portuguese Constitution -- 6. The Republican, Democratic and Semi-presidential Political System -- 7. Unitarian Structure of the Portuguese State and Minor Political Entities -- Part I. Sources of Portuguese Law -- Chapter 1. The Constitution as the Main Source of Portuguese Constitutional Law -- 1. General Meaning of Constitution -- 2. The Constitution as Law of the State -- 3. The Constitution as the Supreme Act of Public Law -- 4. The Constitution as the Core of the Positive Legal Order -- 5. The Constitution as Legal Code -- Chapter 2. Constituent Power and Constitutional Reform -- 1. Constituent Power and the Birth of the Constitution -- 2. The Characteristic Features of Constituent Power -- 3. Particular Manifestations of the Constituent Power -- 4. Constitutional Reform -- 5. Entrenched Matters and Constitutional Reform -- 6. The Hyper-rigidity of the Portuguese Constitution -- Chapter 3. The Secondary Sources of Portuguese Constitutional Law -- 1. The Diminished Relevance of Constitutional Custom -- 2. Practical Limitation of Constitutional Jurisprudence -- 3. Exclusion of Other Sources of Constitutional Law -- Chapter 4. The Non-constitutional Sources of Portuguese Law -- 1. General Framework of the Public Law Functions and Acts and Their Hierarchy -- 2. International Function and International Conventions -- 3. Legislative Function and Legislative Acts -- 4. Political Function and Political Acts -- 5. Administrative Function and Administrative Acts -- 6. Judicial Function and Judicial Acts.
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Working paper
This chapter provides an overview of the emerging field of transnational constitutional law (TCL). Whilst questions of constitutional law are typically discussed in the context of a specific domestic legal setting, a salient strategy of TCL is to understand constitutional law and its values by placing them 'in context' with existing and evolving cultural norms and political, social and economic discourses and struggles. Drawing on socio-legal investigations into the relationships between law and non-law and the significance of legal pluralism, TCL considers what role constitutional law and its values might play in shaping and bringing about social and legal transformation within an emerging global economic order in which non-territorially confined spaces of struggle involve transnational actors and social formation dynamics. TCL thus emerges out of constitutional law in a transnational legal context. Based on Zumbansen's concept of Transnational Law (TL) as a methodological framework to study the Actors, Norms and Processes of legal formations in a global context, rather than positing TL as a distinct legal field, we examine transnational constitutional law phenomena in their social, political and economic contexts. This allows us to revisit and reassess well-known constitutional law concepts such as the rule of law, equality and access to justice in a new light, in particular where we confront – in this paper – legacies of these concepts in both the Global North and South. This engagement renders visible lived experiences of constitutional law and constitutionalism in local and transnational contexts, drawing attention to the growing number of those who have, through processes of globalisation, fallen out of, or were never made party to, the Western 'social contract'. We present TCL as emerging on two levels. On a macro level, studies of comparative constitutional law and post-colonial approaches to law shine light on processes of globalisation and financialization as they manifest themselves in conflictual dynamics within trade law, and international human rights law, with regard to civil, socio-economic and cultural rights. TCL also emerges on a micro level through careful ethnographic and anthropological studies that examine different forms of what Saskia Sassen persuasively coined "Expulsions", meaning struggles and resistance against different forms of expropriation, eviction or alienation, within volatile economic and political landscapes. Finally, our transnational critique of the 'rule of law' reflects our hope for a 'thick' and historically reflective RoL concept. In
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In: Redefining Comparative Constitutional Law (Vicki Jackson & Madhav Khosla eds., Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2024)
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