ABSTRACT

This book offers a multi-discursive analysis of the constitutional foundations for peaceful coexistence, the constitutional background for discontent and the impact of discontent, and the consequences of conflict and revolution on the constitutional order of a democratic society which may lead to its implosion. It explores the capacity of the constitutional order to serve as a reliable framework for peaceful co-existence while allowing for reasonable and legitimate discontent. It outlines the main factors contributing to rising pressure on constitutional order which may produce an implosion of constitutionalism and constitutional democracy as we have come to know it. The collection presents a wide range of views on the ongoing implosion of the liberal-democratic constitutional consensus which predetermined the constitutional axiology, the institutional design, the constitutional mythology and the functioning of the constitutional orders since the last decades of the 20th century. The constitutional perspective is supplemented with perspectives from financial, EU, labour and social security law, administrative law, migration and religious law. Liberal viewpoints encounter radical democratic and critical legal viewpoints. The work thus allows for a plurality of viewpoints, theoretical preferences and thematic discourses offering a pluralist scientific account of the key challenges to peaceful coexistence within the current constitutional framework.


The book provides a valuable resource for academics, researchers and policymakers working in the areas of constitutional law and politics.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|37 pages

The constitutional foundations of democratic peace and democratic discontent in times of crisis and transition

part III|61 pages

Peace, order, and disorder in composite societies

chapter 6|23 pages

Building order in age of revolutions

A transnational history of constitution making: 1787–1867

chapter 7|15 pages

Inequality and discontent

A comparative constitutional law inquiry on South Asia and Latin America

chapter 8|21 pages

A silent revolution

How Islamic religious law is paving its way to the European legal orders

part IV|62 pages

Economic challenges to constitutional peace and order in times of crisis of neoliberalism

chapter 9|19 pages

The transformative side of law

Reflections on the reconstruction of a radical democratic labour law 1

chapter 11|20 pages

Constitutional change in Greece as a result of the financial crisis

Privatisations and the silent (r)evolution of the economic constitution

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion