This landmark book provides the first systematic overview of the
key scholarly contributions in an emerging field of research on
constitutionalism: the sociology of constitutions. It presents
chapters offering very different normative and methodological
approaches to constitutions, ranging from analysis of national
constitutional law, to research on transnational legal forms, to
discussions of the constitutional impact of international human
rights law. The book makes an important contribution to a series of
wider debates - spanning constitutional law, legal theory,
comparative constitutionalism, sociology, and political science -
about the changing nature of constitutionalism. Researchers and
students in constitutional law will gain a comprehensive
appreciation of a diverse range of distinctively sociological
approaches to constitutional law and an in-depth understanding of
distinctive sociological dimensions of constitutions. The book
offers insights into the sources of constitutional normativity in
society and it proposes different sociological methods for
addressing them.
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