ABSTRACT

This interdisciplinary collection examines the significance of constitutions in setting the terms and conditions upon which market economies operate.

With some important exceptions, most notably from the tradition of Latin American constitutionalism, scholarship on constitutional law has paid negligible attention to questions of how constitutions relate to economic phenomena. A considerable body of literature has debated the due limits of the exercise of executive and legislative power, and discussions about legitimacy, democracy, and the adjudication of rights (civil and political, and socioeconomic) abound, yet scant attention has been paid by constitutional lawyers to the ways in which constitutions may protect and empower economic actors, and to how constitutions might influence the regulation and governance of specific markets. The contributors to this collection mobilize insights from other disciplines – including economic theory, history, and sociology – and consider the relationship between constitutional frameworks and bodies of law – including property law, criminal law, tax law, financial regulation, and human rights law – to advance understanding of how constitutions relate to markets and to the political economy.

This book’s analysis of the role constitutions play in shaping markets will appeal to scholars and students in law, economics, history, politics, and sociology.

part 1|48 pages

The Constitutional Embeddedness of Markets

chapter Chapter 1|23 pages

The Constitutional Disembeddedness of Markets?

A Discussion of Competing Accounts

chapter Chapter 2|23 pages

Law of Nature, Law of Man

Economic Theories of Constitutions and the Normative Question

part 2|176 pages

Markets, Constitutions, and Inequality: Legal Regimes

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Fiscal Sustainability and Its Jurisprudential Evolution

The Fraught Dialogue between the Economy and the Law

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

Protecting Property

Crime Control, Constitutional Organization and Neoliberal Governance in Colombia

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Rethinking the Historic Models of the Role of Constitutions in Shaping Patterns of Inequality

Iberian Constitutionalism, Common Property, and Colonialism

chapter Chapter 11|20 pages

Multinationals, Inequality, and a Competition Law Response

Lessons from the East India Company

chapter Chapter 12|9 pages

Afterword

Markets, Constitutions, and Inequality in the Twenty-First Century