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Negretto provides the first systematic explanation of the origins
of constitutional designs from an analytical, historical and
comparative perspective. Based on analysis of constitutional change
in Latin America from 1900 to 2008 and four detailed case studies,
Negretto shows the main determinants of constitutional choice are
the past performance of constitutions in providing effective and
legitimate instruments of government and the strategic interests of
the actors who have influence over institutional selection. The
book explains how governance problems shape the general guidelines
for reform, while strategic calculations and power resources affect
the selection of specific alternatives of design. It emphasizes the
importance of events that trigger reform and the designers' level
of electoral uncertainty for understanding the relative impact of
short-term partisan interests on constitution writing. Negretto's
study challenges predominant theories of institutional choice and
paves the way for the development of a new research agenda on
institutional change.
Growing public discontent with the performance and quality of many
contemporary democracies makes them vulnerable to popular pressures
to profoundly transform or replace their constitutions. However,
there is little systematic academic discussion on the legal and
political challenges that these events pose to democratic
principles and practices. This book, a collaborative effort by
legal scholars and political scientists, analyzes these challenges
from an interdisciplinary and comparative perspective. It fills a
theoretical vacuum by examining the possibility that constitutions
might be replaced within a democratic regime, while exploring the
conditions under which these processes are more compatible or less
compatible with democratic principles. It also calls attention to
the real-world political importance of the phenomenon, because
recent episodes of constitutional redrafting in countries including
Kenya, Poland, Venezuela and Hungary suggest that some aspects of
these processes may be associated with either the improvement or
the gradual erosion of democracy.
Growing public discontent with the performance and quality of many
contemporary democracies makes them vulnerable to popular pressures
to profoundly transform or replace their constitutions. However,
there is little systematic academic discussion on the legal and
political challenges that these events pose to democratic
principles and practices. This book, a collaborative effort by
legal scholars and political scientists, analyzes these challenges
from an interdisciplinary and comparative perspective. It fills a
theoretical vacuum by examining the possibility that constitutions
might be replaced within a democratic regime, while exploring the
conditions under which these processes are more compatible or less
compatible with democratic principles. It also calls attention to
the real-world political importance of the phenomenon, because
recent episodes of constitutional redrafting in countries including
Kenya, Poland, Venezuela and Hungary suggest that some aspects of
these processes may be associated with either the improvement or
the gradual erosion of democracy.
This book provides the first systematic explanation of the origins
of constitutional designs from an analytical, historical, and
comparative perspective. Based on a comprehensive analysis of
constitutional change in Latin America from 1900 to 2008 and four
detailed case studies, Gabriel Negretto shows that the main
determinants of constitutional choice are the past performance of
constitutions in providing effective and legitimate instruments of
government and the strategic interests of the actors who have
influence over institutional selection. The book explains how
governance problems shape the general guidelines for reform, while
strategic calculations and power resources affect the selection of
specific alternatives of design. It also emphasizes the importance
of the events that trigger reform and the designers' level of
electoral uncertainty for understanding the relative impact of
short-term partisan interests on constitution writing. Negretto's
study challenges predominant theories of institutional choice, and
paves the way for the development of a new research agenda on
institutional change.
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