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Constituents Before Assembly: Participation, Deliberation, and Representation in the Crafting of New Constitutions (Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy)

Constituents Before Assembly: Participation, Deliberation, and Representation in the Crafting of New Constitutions (Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy)

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Todd A. Eisenstadt, A. Carl LeVan, Tofigh Maboudi
Cambridge University Press, 7/3/2017
EAN 9781107168220, ISBN10: 1107168228

Hardcover, 218 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English

Under what circumstances do new constitutions improve a nation's level of democracy? Between 1974 and 2014, democracy increased in seventy-seven countries following the adoption of a new constitution, but it decreased or stayed the same in forty-seven others. This book demonstrates that increased participation in the forming of constitutions positively impacts levels of democracy. It is discovered that the degree of citizen participation at the 'convening stage' of constitution-making has a strong effect on levels of democracy. This finding defies the common theory that levels of democracy result from the content of constitutions, and instead lends support to 'deliberative' theories of democracy. Patterns of constitutions are then compared, differentiating imposed and popular constitution-making processes, using case studies from Chile, Nigeria, Gambia, and Venezuela to illustrate the dynamics specific to imposed constitution-making, and case studies from Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, and Tunisia to illustrate the specific dynamics of popular constitution-making.

Introducing constitutions as political process
1. A call to pens (even if not mightier than swords)
how context and process prevail over content in constitutional change
2. Making the constituents King
how constituent deliberation on new constitutions democratizes more than mere citizen participation
3. Parchment politics
the importance of context and conditions to the convening of constitutions
4. The logic of 'top down' elite constitutionalism
how imposed processes may (but usually do not) produce better democracy
5. The logic of 'bottom up' constitutionalism
how popular processes tilt the odds in favor of democracy
6. Interest groups versus individual participation, and the gap between ideal constitutional process and real world practices.