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Reconsidering Constitutional Formation II Decisive Constitutional Normativity - From Old Liberties to New Precedence (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018)
Loot Price: R1,629
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Reconsidering Constitutional Formation II Decisive Constitutional Normativity - From Old Liberties to New Precedence (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018)
Series: Studies in the History of Law and Justice, 12
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This second volume of ReConFort, published open access, addresses
the decisive role of constitutional normativity, and focuses on
discourses concerning the legal role of constitutional norms. Taken
together with ReConFort I (National Sovereignty), it calls for an
innovative reassessment of constitutional history drawing on key
categories to convey the legal nature of the constitution itself
(national sovereignty, precedence, justiciability of power,
judiciary as constituted power). In the late 18th and early 19th
centuries, constitutional normativity began to complete the legal
fixation of the entire political order. This juridification in one
constitutional text resulted in a conceptual differentiation from
ordinary law, which extends to alterability and justiciability. The
early expressions of this 'new order of the ages' suggest an
unprecedented and irremediable break with European legal tradition,
be it with British colonial governance or the French ancien regime.
In fact, while the shift to constitutions as a hierarchically
'higher' form of positive law was a revolutionary change, it also
drew upon old liberties. The American constitutional discourse,
which was itself heavily influenced by British common law, in turn
served as an inspiration for a variety of constitutional
experiments - from the French Revolution to Napoleon's downfall, in
the halls of the Frankfurt Assembly, on the road to a unified
Italy, and in the later theoretical discourse of twentieth-century
Austria. If the constitution states the legal rules for the
law-making process, then its Kelsian primacy is mandatory. Also
included in this volume are the French originals and English
translations of two vital documents. The first - Emmanuel Joseph
Sieyes' Du Jury Constitutionnaire (1795) - highlights an early
attempt to reconcile the democratic values of the French Revolution
with the pragmatic need to legally protect the Revolution. The
second - the 1812 draft of the Constitution of the Kingdom of
Poland - presents the 'constitutional propaganda' of the Russian
Tsar Alexander I to bargain for the support of the Lithuanian and
Polish nobility. These documents open new avenues of research into
Europe's constitutional history: one replete with diverse contexts
and national experiences, but above all an overarching motif of
constitutional decisiveness that served to complete the
juridification of sovereignty. (www.reconfort.eu)
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