Democratizing Constitutional Law

Democratizing Constitutional Law

Perspectives on Legal Theory and the Legitimacy of Constitutionalism

Goncalves Fernandes, Bernardo; Bustamante, Thomas

Springer International Publishing AG

04/2018

328

Mole

Inglês

9783319803371

15 a 20 dias

522

Descrição não disponível.
I Challenging and Defending Judicial
Review.- 1. Randomized Judicial Review; Andrei Marmor.- 2. On the Difficulty to
Ground the Authority of Constitutional Courts: Can Strong Judicial Review be
Morally Justified?; Thomas Bustamante.- 3. The Reasons without Vote: The
Representative and Majoritarian Function of Constitutional Courts; Luis Roberto
Barroso.- II Constitutional Dialogues and Constitutional Deliberation.- 4.
Decoupling Judicial Review From Judicial Supremacy; Stephen Gardbaum.- 5. Scope
and limits of dialogic constitutionalism; Roberto Gargarella.- 6. A Defence of
a Broader Sense of Constitutional Dialogues based on Jeremy Waldron's Criticism
on Judicial Review; Bernardo Goncalves Fernandes.- III Institutional Alternatives
for Constitutional Changes.- 7. New Institutional Mechanisms for Making Constitutional
Law; Mark Tushnet.- 8. Democratic Constitutional Change: Assessing
Institutional Possibilities; Christopher Zurn.- 9. The Unconstitutionality of
Constitutional Changesin Colombia: a Tension between Majoritatian and
Constitutional Democracy; Gonzalo Ramirez Cleves.- IV Constitutional Promises
and Democratic Participation.- 10. Is there such thing as a radical constitution?;
Vera Karam de Chueiri.- 11. Judicial reference to community values - A pointer
towards constitutional juries?; Eric Ghosh.- V Legal Theory and Constitutional
Interpretation.- 12. Common Law Constitutionalism and the Written Constitution;
Wil Waluchow and Katharina Stevens.- 13. On how law is not like chess - Dworkin
and the theory of conceptual types; Ronaldo Porto Macedo Junior.



Common Law Constitutionalism;Constitutional juries;Democratic Legitimacy;European Convention on Human Rights;Future of Constitutionalism;Government of the Majority;International Human Rights Conventions;Judicial Review in Constitutional Democracies;Judicial reference to community values;Legitimacy Presuppositions;Political Constitutionalism;Radical Constitution;Written Constitution