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Reconsidering Constitutional Formation I National Sovereignty - A Comparative Analysis of the Juridification by Constitution (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
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Reconsidering Constitutional Formation I National Sovereignty - A Comparative Analysis of the Juridification by Constitution (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
Series: Studies in the History of Law and Justice, 6
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This open access book can be downloaded from link.springer.com
Legal studies and consequently legal history focus on
constitutional documents, believing in a nominalist autonomy of
constitutional semantics. Reconsidering Constitutional Formation in
the late 18th and 19th century, kept historic constitutions from
being simply log-books for political experts through a functional
approach to the interdependencies between constitution and public
discourse. Sovereignty had to be 'believed' by the subjects and the
political elites. Such a communicative orientation of
constitutional processes became palpable in the 'religious'
affinities of the constitutional preambles. They were held as
'creeds' of a new order, not only due to their occasional recourse
to divine authority, but rather due to the claim for eternal
validity contexts of constitutional guarantees. The communication
dependency of constitutions was of less concern in terms of the
preamble than the constituents' big worries about government
organisation. Their indecisiveness between monarchical and popular
sovereignty was established through the discrediting of the
Republic in the Jacobean reign of terror and the 'renaissance' of
the monarchy in the military resistance against the French
revolutionary and later Napoleonic campaigns. The constitutional
formation as a legal act of constituting could therefore defend the
monarchy from the threat of the people (Albertine Statute 1848),
could be a legal decision of a national constituent assembly
(Belgian Constitution 1831), could borrow from the old liberties
(Polish May Constitution 1791) or try to remain in between by
referring to the Nation as sovereign (French September Constitution
1791, Cadiz Constitution 1812). Common to all contexts is the use
of national sovereignty as a legal starting point. The consequent
differentiation between constituent and constituted power manages
to justify the self-commitment of political power in legal terms.
National sovereignty is the synonym for the juridification of
sovereignty by means of the constitution. The novelty of the
constitutions of the late 18th and 19th century is the normativity,
the positivity of the constitutional law as one unified law, to be
the measure for the legality of all other law. Therefore ReConFort
will continue with the precedence of constitution.
(www.reconfort.eu)
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