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CHF996.80
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Auteur
Vicki C. Jackson is the Thurgood Marshall Professor of Constitutional law at Harvard Law School, Harvard University, USA
Mila Versteeg is the Martha Lubin Karsh and Bruce A. Karsh Bicentennial Professor of Law at the School of Law, University of Virginia, USA
Résumé
This new 4 volume collection meets the need for an authoritative reference work to help researchers and students navigate and make better sense of an abundance of scholarship in comparative constitutional law.
Contenu
Volume I:
Constitutions and Constitutionalism
Part 1. Why a Constitution?
Cass R. Sunstein, extract from 'Constitutionalism and Secession', University of Chicago Law Review, 58, 2, 1991, 636-643.
Jon Elster, extract from 'Ulysses Unbound: Constitutions as Constraints', in Ulysses Unbound: Studies in Rationality, Precommitment and Constraints, (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 88-96, 99-104, 115-118, 129-174.
Stephen Holmes, 'The Constitution of Sovereignty in Jean Bodin', in Passions and Constraint: On the Theory of Liberal Democracy, (University of Chicago Press, 1995), pp. 100-133.
Russell Hardin, 'Why A Constitution?', in Denis J. Galligan and Mila Versteeg (eds), Social and Political Foundations of Constitutions, (Cambridge University Press, 2013), pp. 51-72.
Qianfan Zhang, 'A Constitution Without Constitutionalism? The Paths of Constitutional Development in China', International Journal of Constitutional Law, 8, 4, 2010, 950-976.
Part 2. Constitutionalism or Constitutionalisms?
Louis Henkin, 'Elements of Constitutionalism', The Review: International Commission of Jurists, 60, 1998, 11-22.
Mark Tushnet, extract from 'Authoritarian Constitutionalism', Cornell Law Review, 100, 2015, 397-421, 448-460.
Roberto Gargarella, 'Latin American Constitutionalism: Social Rights and the "Engine Room" of the Constitution', Notre Dame Journal of International and Comparative Law, 4, 2014, 9-18.
Jeremy Waldron, 'Constitutionalism: A Skeptical View', in Political Theory: Essays on Institutions, (Harvard University Press, 2016), pp. 23-44.
Part 3. Constitutional Law as Distinctive?
Bruce Ackerman, 'Constitutionalizing Revolution', in The Future of Liberal Revolution, (Yale University Press, 1992), pp. 46-68.
N. W. Barber, 'The State and its Constitution', in The Constitutional State (Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 75-88.
Walter F. Murphy, 'Constitutions, Constitutionalism, and Democracy', in Douglas Greenberg, Stanley N. Katz, Melanie Beth Oliviero and Steven C. Wheatley (eds), Constitutionalism and Democracy: Transitions in the Contemporary World (Oxford University Press, 1993), pp. 3-25.
Part 4. How Does a Constitution Relate to Society?
Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn, 'Constitutional Identity', The Review of Politics, 68, 2006, 361-397.
H. W. O. Okoth-Ogendo, 'Constitutions without Constitutionalism: Reflections on an African Political Paradox', in Douglas Greenberg, Stanley N. Katz, Melanie Beth Oliviero and Steven C. Wheatley (eds), Constitutionalism and Democracy: Transitions in the Contemporary World (Oxford University Press, 1993), pp. 65-82.
Volume II:
Constitution-Making, Methodology, and Interpretation
Part 5. Constitution-Making
Vivien Hart, 'Democratic Constitution Making', United States Institute of Peace Special Report 2, 2003.
Jon Elster, 'Forces and Mechanisms in the Constitution-Making Process', Duke Law Journal, 45, 1995, 364-396.
Tom Ginsburg, Zachary Elkins and Justin Blount, 'Does the Process of Constitution-Making Matter?', Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 5, 2009, 201-223.
David Landau, extract from 'Abusive Constitutionalism', University of California Davis Law Review, 47, 2013, 191-203, 259-260.
Kim Lane Scheppele, 'On the Unconstitutionality of Constitutional Change: An Essay in Honor of Laìszloì Soìlyom', in Csehi Zoltan et al (eds), Viva vox iuris civilis: tanulmaìnyok Soìlyom Laìszloì 287 (Szent Istvan Tarsulat, 2012), pp. 286-310.
Part 6. Is there a Methodology of Comparative Constitutional Law?
Mark Tushnet, extract from 'The Possibilities of Comparative Constitutional Law', Yale Law Journal, **108, 1999, 1225-1242, 1257-1301, 1303-1306.
Ran Hirschl, 'The Question of Case Selection in Comparative Constitutional Law', American Journal of Comparative Law, *53, *2005, 125-155.
David S. Law, 'Constitutions', in Peter Cane and Herbert M. Kritzer (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Empirical Legal Research, (Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 376-398.
Theunis Roux, 'Comparative Constitutional Studies: Two Fields or One?', Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 13, 2017, 123-139.
Vicki Jackson, 'Comparative Constitutional Law: Methodologies', in Michel Rosenfeld and András Sajó (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law, (Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 54-74.
David S. Law and Mila Versteeg, 'The Evolution and Ideology of Global Constitutionalism', California Law Review, 99, 2011, 1163-1164, 1171-1202, 1246-1249.
Günter Frankenberg, 'Constitutional Transfers: the IKEA Theory Revisited', International Journal of Constitutional Law, 8, 2010, 563-579.
Vicki C. Jackson, 'Constitutional Comparisons: Convergence, Resistance, Engagement', Harvard Law Review, 109, 2005, 109-128.
Part 7. Interpretive Methodology: Proportionality, Legalism, Originalism, Purposivism
7.1 Proportionality
Robert Alexy, 'Constitutional Rights, Balancing, and Rationality', Ration Juris, 16, 2003, 131-140.
Grégoire C. N. Webber, 'Challenging the Age of Balancing', in The Negotiable Constitution, (Cambridge University Press, 2009), pp. 87-115.
7.2 Purposivism
7.3 Legalism
Volume III:
Government Structures and Frameworks
Part 8. Separation of Powers
Charles Manga Fombad and Enyinna Nwauche, 'Africa's Imperial Presidents: Immunity, Impunity and Accountability', African Journal of Legal Studies, 5, 2012, 91-118.
Bruce Ackerman, extract from 'The New Separation of Powers', Harvard Law Review, 113, 2000, 643-671, 690-697, 716-722.
Charles Fombad, 'The Diffusion of South African-Style Institutions? A Study in Comparative Constitutionalism', in Rosalind Dixon and Theunis Roux (eds) Constitutional Triumphs, Constitutional Disappointments: A Critical Assessment of the 1996 South African Constitution's Local And International Influence (Cambridge University Press, 2018), pp. 359-366 & 370-387.
Part 9. Federalism and Consociationalism
Cheryl Saunders, 'Constitutional Arrangements of Federal Systems', Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 25, 1995, 61-79.
Sujit Choudhry and Nathan Hume, 'Federalism, Devolution and Secession: From Classical to Post-conflict Federalism', in Rosalind Dixon and Tom Ginsburg (eds), Comparative Constitutional Law, (Edward Elgar, 2011), pp. 356-384.
Canadian Secession Reference Case, Supreme Court of Canada, Part III.A, 1998
Part 10. Judicial Review
Tom Ginsburg, 'Why Judicial Review?', in Judicial Review in New Democracies: Constitutional Courts in Asian Cases, (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 21-33.
Mauro Cappelletti, 'Judicial Review in Comparative Perspective', in The Judicial Process in Comparative Perspective, (Oxford University Press, 1989), pp. 117-149.
Wojciech Sadurski, 'Judicial Review and the Protection of Constitut…