ABSTRACT

Constitutional law is naturally planned to go beyond present time and beyond the territorial space of each State. For international and constitutional law, future generations are 'simply' and 'generally' the entire set of human beings following the current generation. The war especially with weapons of mass destruction endangers human survival; the value Constitutional of the peace becomes one of the first contents of the law 'oriented' to the future. Since World War II and especially in the last 40 years, international law and constitutional law have begun to move toward each other in a two-way process of mutual influence and contamination especially in the field of rights. Constitutional norms also play a cultural function, triggering factors that can 'react' on the effectiveness on the concrete relevance and definitively on the substantial quality of the rule. Around the Constitution as a legacy there is a mutual and bilateral bond.