ABSTRACT

Being the first casualty of the international financial crisis, Iceland was, in many ways, turned into a laboratory when it came to responding to one of the largest corporate failures on record.

This edited volume offers the most wide-ranging treatment of the Icelandic financial crisis and its political, economic, social, and constitutional consequences. Interdisciplinary, with contributions from historians, economists, sociologists, legal scholars, political scientists and philosophers, it also compares and contrasts the Icelandic experience with other national and global crises. It examines the economic magnitude of the crisis, the social and political responses, and the unique transitional justice mechanisms used to deal with it. It looks at backward-looking elements, including a societal and legal reckoning – which included the indictment of a Prime Minister and jailing of leading bankers for their part in the financial crisis – and forward-looking features, such as an attempt to rewrite the Icelandic constitution. Throughout, it underscores the contemporary relevance of the Icelandic case. While the Icelandic economic recovery has been much quicker than expected; it shows that public faith in political elites has not been restored.

This text will be of key interest to scholars, policy-makers and students of the financial crisis in such fields as European politics, international political economy, comparative politics, sociology, economics, contemporary history, and more broadly the social sciences and humanities.

part I|59 pages

The road to economic disaster

chapter 1|16 pages

Iceland's financial crisis

An economic perspective

chapter 2|20 pages

The rise and fall of a financial empire

Looking at the banking collapse from the inside out

part III|87 pages

The politics of Iceland's constitutional reform

chapter 10|17 pages

Constitution on ice

chapter 11|10 pages

Constitutional revision

A weak legislative framework compounded by political disputes

chapter 12|9 pages

Constituent power and authorization

Anatomy and failure of a constitution-making process

chapter 13|13 pages

The Constitutional Council

Objectives and shortcomings of an innovative process

chapter 14|21 pages

The Constituent Assembly

A study in failure