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Sociology of Constitutions
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Sociology of Constitutions book
Sociology of Constitutions
DOI link for Sociology of Constitutions
Sociology of Constitutions book
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ABSTRACT
This collection brings together some of the most influential sociologists of law to confront the challenges of current transnational constitutionalism. It shows the constitution appearing in a new light: no longer as an essential factor of unity and stabilisation but as a potential defence of pluralism and innovation.
The first part of the book is devoted to the analysis of the concept of constitution, highlighting the elements that can contribute from a socio-legal perspective, to clarifying the principle meanings attributed to the constitution. The study goes on to analyse some concrete aspects of the functioning of constitutions in contemporary society. In applying Luhmann’s General Systems Theory to a comparative analysis of the concept of constitution, the work contributes to a better understanding of this traditional concept in both its institutionalised and functional aspects.
Defining the constitution’s contents and functions both at the conceptual level and by taking empirical issues of particular comparative interest into account, this study will be of importance to scholars and students of sociology of law, sociology of politics and comparative public law.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I
chapter 2|19 pages
Exogenous self-binding: how social subsystems externalise their foundational paradoxes in the process of constitutionalisation
chapter 3|11 pages
Promise as premise: rewriting the paradox of constitutional reasoning
part |2 pages
Part II
chapter 10|18 pages
Standards of ‘good governance’ and peripheral constitutionalism: the case of post-accession romania
chapter 11|13 pages
The organisation of market expectations beyond legality: an Argentinian case
chapter 12|18 pages
De-constitutionalising Latin America: particularism and universalism in a constitutional perspective
part |2 pages
Appendix