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In: Asian folklore and social life monographs 20
In: Tung fang wen tsʻung
In: CIHM/ICMH Microfiche series = CIHM/ICMH collection de microfiches no. 05207
This innovative book blends constitutional theory with real-life political practice to explore the impact of codifying constitutional amendments on the operation of the constitution in relation to democracy, the rule of law, and the separation of powers. It draws from comparative, historical, political and theoretical perspectives to answer questions all constitutional designers should ask themselves: - Should the constitution append amendments sequentially to the end of the text? - Should it embed amendments directly into the existing text, with notations about what has been modified and how? - Should it instead insert amendments into the text without indicating at all that any alteration has occurred? The book examines the 3 major models of amendment codification - the appendative, the integrative, and the invisible models - and also shows how some jurisdictions have innovated alternative forms of amendment codification that combine elements of more than 1 model in a unique hybridisation driven by history, law, and politics. Constitutional designers rarely consider where in the constitution to codify amendments once they are ratified. Yet this choice is pivotal to the operation of any constitution. This groundbreaking book shows why the placement of constitutional amendments goes well beyond mere aesthetics. It influences how and whether a people remembers its past, how the constitutional text will be interpreted and by whom, and whether the constitution will be easily accessible to the governed. A global tour of the high stakes of constitution-making, this book features 18 diverse and outstanding scholars from around the world - across Africa, America, Asia and Oceania, and Europe - raising new questions, opening our eyes to new streams of research, and uncovering new possibilities for constitutional design
In: Comparative constitutional law and policy
It is well known that the US Constitution has been amended twenty-seven times since its creation in 1787, but that number does not reflect the true extent of constitutional change in America. Although the Constitution is globally recognized as a written text, it consists also of unwritten rules and principles that are just as important, such as precedents, customs, traditions, norms, presuppositions, and more. These, too, have been amended, but how does that process work? In this book, leading scholars of law, history, philosophy, and political science consider the many theoretical, conceptual, and practical dimensions of what it means to amend America's 'unwritten Constitution': how to change the rules, who may legitimately do it, why leaders may find it politically expedient to enact written instead of unwritten amendments, and whether anything is lost by changing the constitution without a codified constitutional amendment.
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In: Comparative Constitutional Law: Redefining the Field (Vicki Jackson & Madhav Khosla, eds., Oxford University Press, 2024) (Forthcoming)
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In: 110 California Law Review 2005 (2022)
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In: 59 Alberta Law Review 777 (2022)
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In: 3 Rutgers International Law and Human Rights Journal 1 (2023)
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In: in Rehan Abeyratne & Bùi Ngọc Sơn (eds.), The Politics of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment in Asia (Routledge 2021)
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In: 70 American University Law Review 773 (2021)
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Working paper
In: in Noura Karazivan and Jean Leclair (eds.), The Political and Constitutional Legacy of Pierre Elliott Trudeau (LexisNexix 2020)
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