Experiments of Living Constitutionalism
In: Forthcoming, Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy
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In: Forthcoming, Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy
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In: Studies in law, politics, and society, Band 44, S. 73-105
In: Special Issue Constitutional Politics in a Conservative Era; Studies in Law, Politics and Society, S. 73-105
In: Islam. L. Rev. [Vol. 3: 3 & 4, Autumn/Winter, 2019], pp. 63-75
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This article analyses 'living constitutionalism approach' to interpretation of constitution. In doing so, first the two traditional forms of constitutionalism i.e. political and legal constitutionalism are reviewed. Thereafter, the discussion on the theoretical regime of interpretation is reflected so as to determine the appropriate approach of Constitutional Interpretation. Moreover, the emerging trends in the courts of Pakistan in favour of 'living constitutionalism' and progressive and dynamic interpretation of the constitution are also analyzed. Finally, the discussion as aforesaid is leading to the conclusion that dynamic interpretation is the most appropriate mechanism for realization of the purposes of living Constitutionalism.
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In: Harvard Public Law Working Paper No. 22-30
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In: Northwestern University Law Review, Band 113, Heft 6
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Working paper
In: Trento Student Law Review (Forthcoming Spring 2022)
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In: Texas Law Review, Forthcoming
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The living or evolving methodologies are widely used in interpretive practices of constitutional and international courts. Nevertheless, defences and criticisms of those methodologies hardly ever offer a systematic approach to interpretative stages of living constitutionalism. This article aims at remedying such insufficiency of constitutional theory through a systematic reconstruction of interpretative stages entailed by living constitutionalism. Then, I will identify the semantic presuppositions of living or evolving methodologies. The outcomes of this work will argue that those presuppositions lie on conventional semantics; that is, the extension of concepts refers more to social consensus than constitutional goods protected through rights. The former entails an impossibility to distinguish between arbitrariness and judicial discretion. Summary:Setting the stage: the challenge of systematizing the nature and semantic presuppositions of evolving interpretive methodologies. I. First interpretive instruction: to identify the jurisprudential and doctrinal trends. I. Second interpretive instruction: to recognize the constitutional agents who construct aspirations incorporated in the Constitution. III. Third interpretive instruction: to recognize the formal structure and actual function of government of the state. IV. Fourth interpretive instruction: to cast (political) consequences of judicial decision on the social structure. V. Fifth interpretive instruction: to assume the indefeasibility of constitutional text and tradition before current aspirations, ideals and values. VI. Semantic presuppositions of evolving interpretation of rights: a conventionalist semantic theory. VII. Outline for overcoming the difficulties of conventional semantics applied to evolving interpretation of rights. Conclusions. ; Las metodologías evolutivas o «vivientes» se utilizan con frecuencia en las prácticas interpretativas de los tribunales constitucionales e internacionales. Sin embargo, tanto las defensas como las críticas de tales metodologías rara vez caracterizan o sistematizan sus directivas interpretativas. El objetivo de este trabajo apunta, en primer lugar, a revertir tales insuficiencias mediante una reconstrucción de los pasos metodológicos que plantean los defensores del constitucionalismo viviente. Luego, se procederá a identificar los presupuestos semánticos de las metodologías evolutivas. Los resultados de esta investigación pretenden argumentar que tales presupuestos se caracterizan por una teoría del significado radical o eminentemente convencional; esto es, la extensión de los derechos fundamentales se apoyaría más en consensos sociales que en los bienes constitucionales que tales derechos protegen. Esta dificultad presenta especial relevancia porque conllevaría la imposibilidad de distinguir entre la arbitrariedad y la discrecionalidad judicial.
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In: (2024) 15 Jurisprudence (forthcoming)
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In: Arizona Legal Studies Discussion Paper No. 16-25
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Working paper
In: University of Illinois Law Review, Band 2012, Heft 3, S. 101
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In: 107 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 937 (2022)
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In: Boston University Law Review, Band 95
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