Constitutionalism: Philosophical FoundationsLarry Alexander Cambridge University Press, 2001 M02 26 - 319 páginas A distinguished international team of legal theorists examine the issue of constitutionalism and pose such foundational questions as Why have a constitution? How do we know what the constitution of a country really is? How should a constitution be interpreted? Why should one generation feel bound by the constitution of an earlier one?The volume will be of particular importance to those in philosophy, law, political science and international relations interested in whether and what kinds of constitutions should be adopted in countries without them, and involved in debates about constitutional interpretation. |
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... United Kingdom CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS The Edinburgh Building , Cambridge CB2 2RU , UK 40 West 20th Street , New York , NY 10011-4211 , USA 10 Stamford Road , Oakleigh , Melbourne 3166 , Australia Ruiz de Alarcón 13 , 28014 Madrid ...
... United Kingdom CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS The Edinburgh Building , Cambridge CB2 2RU , UK 40 West 20th Street , New York , NY 10011-4211 , USA 10 Stamford Road , Oakleigh , Melbourne 3166 , Australia Ruiz de Alarcón 13 , 28014 Madrid ...
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... United States Consti- tution itself was the product of such a constitutional revolution . ) 5 Third , the symbolic constitution might remain the same , but the metacon- stitution might change . Thus , the original metaconstitutional ...
... United States Consti- tution itself was the product of such a constitutional revolution . ) 5 Third , the symbolic constitution might remain the same , but the metacon- stitution might change . Thus , the original metaconstitutional ...
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... United States Constitution , Kay argues that we now accept the lawmaking authority of the framers then ( in 1789 ) . That is , we now accept a meta- or preconstitutional norm that locates authority in the framers , which in turn means ...
... United States Constitution , Kay argues that we now accept the lawmaking authority of the framers then ( in 1789 ) . That is , we now accept a meta- or preconstitutional norm that locates authority in the framers , which in turn means ...
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... United States Constitution . He argues that historicist accounts - those that take the meaning of the Constitution to be dependent on the intentions of the authors - cannot properly answer the question of why the past should govern the ...
... United States Constitution . He argues that historicist accounts - those that take the meaning of the Constitution to be dependent on the intentions of the authors - cannot properly answer the question of why the past should govern the ...
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... United States Constitution at least , the historicist / justice - seeking dilemma may not exist . For he says that " the framing constitutional generations [ were ] ... speaking at a high level of moral generality or abstraction in the ...
... United States Constitution at least , the historicist / justice - seeking dilemma may not exist . For he says that " the framing constitutional generations [ were ] ... speaking at a high level of moral generality or abstraction in the ...
Contenido
American Constitutionalism | 16 |
Constitutional Authorship | 64 |
What Is the Constitution? and Other Fundamental Questions | 99 |
On the Authority and Interpretation of Constitutions Some Preliminaries | 152 |
Legitimacy and Interpretation | 194 |
The Domain of Constitutional Justice | 235 |
Precommitment and Disagreement | 271 |
301 | |
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accept Ackerman adjudication American application argued argument authority Bill of Rights Bruce Ackerman claim commitment concerns Congress consent consti constitution-makers constitutional interpretation constitutional justice constitutional law constitutional norm constitutional practice constitutional rules constitutionalism decision democracy democratarian democratic disagreement doctrine domain of constitutional Dworkin enacted entrenched establish example fact Fourteenth Amendment framers freedom fundamental H. L. A. Hart indeterminate individual institutions intentions issue Jed Rubenfeld Jeremy Waldron John Rawls Jon Elster Joseph Raz judges judgment judicial review judiciary justice-seeking lawmaking legislative legislature legitimacy legitimate liberal limits majority matter meaning ment minimum welfare moral opportunity to thrive particular persons political community popular precommitment premise principles question reasons relevant requires right to minimum role Ronald Dworkin rule of recognition self-government sense social stitutional supra Supreme Court theory tion tional tutional understanding understood United United States Constitution