This book challenges the near-universal acceptance of a US-style, Western constitutional paradigm as the best basis for comparative constitutional studies. It does so on three main grounds: anachronism, 'othering' and cultural specificity.Main pillars of 'convergent constitutional theory' are rooted in the revolutionary late-eighteenth century - a lost world; constitutional arrangements that deviate from the paradigm are often branded as 'outliers' or even as not constitutional at all; and the foundations of the paradigm in liberal democracy give no space for other forms of constitutionalism. Whatever the attractions of convergent theory as a normative ideal of good government, for the purposes of understanding, analysing and explaining constitutional systems it is far from ideal.This book discusses and questions: convergent theory's weddedness to writing as the technology of constitution-making; its image of a constitution as fundamental law; its idea that a constitution expresses the 'sovereignty of the people'; its use of tripartite separation of powers as the basic principle of institutional design; its relative neglect of administrative law; its association of 'rights' with judicially enforceable bills of rights; and its obsession with a vaguely specified concept of 'democracy'.It makes suggestions for alternative, preferable methods of understanding, analysing and explaining constitutions, and governmental and constitutional systems.
ISBN: | 9781509988464 |
Publication date: | 24th July 2025 |
Author: | Professor Peter Cane |
Publisher: | Hart Publishing an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 152 pages |
Series: | Hart Studies in Constitutional Theory |
Genres: |
Constitutional and administrative law: general Comparative law |