Constitutional Culture and Democratic RuleJohn A. Ferejohn, Jack N. Rakove, Jonathan Riley This volume investigates the nature of constitutional democratic government in the United States and elsewhere. The editors introduce a basic conceptual framework which the contributors clarify and develop in eleven essays organized into three separate sections. The first section deals with constitutional founding and the founders' use of cultural symbols and traditions to facilitate acceptance of a new regime. The second discusses alternative constitutional structures and their effects on political outcomes. The third focuses on processes of constitutional change and on why founders might choose to make formal amendments relatively difficult or easy to achieve. The book is distinctive because it provides comprehensive tools for analyzing and comparing different forms of constitutional democracy. These tools are discussed in ways that will be of interest to students and readers in political science, law, history and political philosophy. |
From inside the book
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... Madison : Writings ( 1999 ) and Declaring Rights : A Brief History with Documents ( 1997 ) . Professor Rakove is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Antiquarian Society , and he is currently preparing ...
... Madison : Writings ( 1999 ) and Declaring Rights : A Brief History with Documents ( 1997 ) . Professor Rakove is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Antiquarian Society , and he is currently preparing ...
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... Madison whose contributions to The Federalist were , of course , the basis for Martin Diamond's reflections . A brief consideration of Madison's concerns during the decade following the adoption of the federal Constitution will ...
... Madison whose contributions to The Federalist were , of course , the basis for Martin Diamond's reflections . A brief consideration of Madison's concerns during the decade following the adoption of the federal Constitution will ...
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... Madison , the nationalist of 1787 , would have rejected out of hand ( and did in fact roundly criticize in the years to come ) . How Madison seemingly moved so far in his thinking within the space of a decade obviously poses a serious ...
... Madison , the nationalist of 1787 , would have rejected out of hand ( and did in fact roundly criticize in the years to come ) . How Madison seemingly moved so far in his thinking within the space of a decade obviously poses a serious ...
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... Madison's original constitutional theory . That theory rested on at least these crucial positions . First and ... Madison understood that the 3 To be sure , this position posed much less of a problem to Jefferson than it did to Madison ...
... Madison's original constitutional theory . That theory rested on at least these crucial positions . First and ... Madison understood that the 3 To be sure , this position posed much less of a problem to Jefferson than it did to Madison ...
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... Madison had once been so quick to condemn , could in turn be prevailed upon to protest Federalist misrule ? That , of course , was the political strategy to which Madison and Jefferson turned in 1798 , drafting the Virginia and Kentucky ...
... Madison had once been so quick to condemn , could in turn be prevailed upon to protest Federalist misrule ? That , of course , was the political strategy to which Madison and Jefferson turned in 1798 , drafting the Virginia and Kentucky ...
Contents
Constitutional Problematics circa 1787 | 41 |
Inventing Constitutional Traditions The Poverty of Fatalism | 71 |
The Birth Logic of a Democratic Constitution | 110 |
CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE AND DESIGN | 145 |
Constitutional Democracy as a TwoStage Game | 147 |
Imagining Another Madisonian Republic | 170 |
One and Three Separation of Powers and the Independence of the Judiciary in the Italian Constitution | 205 |
A Political Theory of Federalism | 223 |
CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND STABILITY | 269 |
Designing an Amendment Process | 271 |
Constitutional Theory Transformed | 288 |
Constitutional Economic Transition | 328 |
Institutionalizing Constitutional Interpretation | 361 |
393 | |
399 | |
Other editions - View all
Constitutional Culture and Democratic Rule John A. Ferejohn,Jack N. Rakove,Jonathan Riley Limited preview - 2001 |
Constitutional Culture and Democratic Rule John Ferejohn,Jack N. Rakove,Jonathan Riley No preview available - 2001 |
Common terms and phrases
Ackerman agrarian amendment procedures argued argument Article Articles of Confederation authority Bosnia-Herzegovina Bruce Ackerman Cambridge choice citizens claim Commerce Clause conflict Congress constitutional amendment constitutional change constitutional democracy constitutional interpretation constitutional theory constitutionalism context convention council culture Deal debate decision democratic doctrine Eastern Europe economic effects elected electoral enact establish ethnic nationalism example expectations Federalist framers future historicist important institutions interests issue judges judicial review judiciary justice Law Review legislative legislature liberal liberal democratic limits Madison Madisonian median ment moral national government norms originalist Parliament parliamentary parties Philadelphia Convention popular possible post-Communist postconstitutional preferences president problem proposed provincial question Rakove ratification reason regime republic republican restorationism Senate separation of powers simple majority rule social society sovereignty stitutional strategy structure substantive supermajority Supreme Court tion tional tradition transition U.S. Constitution United University Press veto vote York
References to this book
Rethinking the Rule of Law After Communism Adam Czarnota,Martin Krygier,Wojciech Sadurski No preview available - 2005 |