Transconstitutionalism

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Transconstitutionalism

Marcelo Neves ; translated by Kevin Mundy

(Hart monographs in transnational and international law, v. 10)

Hart Publishing, 2013

Other Title

Transconstitucionalismo

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Note

Translated from the Portuguese

Includes bibliographical references (p. [185]-213) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Transconstitutionalism is a concept used to describe what happens to constitutional law when it is emancipated from the state, in which can be found the origins of constitutional law. Transconstitutionalism does not exist because a multitude of new constitutions have appeared, but because other legal orders are now implicated in resolving basic constitutional problems. A transconstitutional problem entails a constitutional issue whose solution may involve national, international, supranational and transnational courts or arbitral tribunals, as well as native local legal institutions. Transconstitutionalism does not take any single legal order or type of order as a starting-point or ultima ratio. It rejects both nation-statism and internationalism, supranationalism, transnationalism and localism as privileged spaces for solving constitutional problems. The transconstitutional model avoids the dilemma of 'monism versus pluralism'. From the standpoint of transconstitutionalism, a plurality of legal orders entails a complementary and conflicting relationship between identity and alterity: constitutional identity is rearticulated on the basis of alterity. Rather than seeking a 'Herculean Constitution', transconstitutionalism tackles the many-headed Hydra of constitutionalism, always looking for the blind spot in one legal system and reflecting it back against the many others found in the world's legal orders.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Theoretical Background I. Constitution as Metaphor? II. The Premodern Hierarchical Social Formation III. The Transition Period: Charters of Freedom or Political Settlements IV. Multicentric Modern Society V. From Structural Couplings to Transversal Rationality 2. From Transversal Constitution . . . I. The Constitution of Constitutionalism II. The Transversal Constitution of the Constitutional State III. Transversal Constitutions beyond the State? 3. . . . to Transconstitutionalism between Legal Orders I. Transconstitutionalism between Legal Orders as a Model for Treating Constitutional Problems II. Transconstitutionalism between International Public Law and State Law III. Transconstitutionalism between Supranational Law and State Law IV. Transconstitutionalism between State Legal Orders V. Transconstitutionalism between State and Transnational Legal Orders VI. Transconstitutionalism between State Legal Orders and Extra-state Local Orders VII. Transconstitutionalism between Supranational Law and International Law 4. Transconstitutionalism in a 'Multilevel' or Multicentric World Legal System I. Multiangle Transconstitutionalism between Orders of the Same Kind and Orders of Different Kinds II. Pluridimensional Transconstitutionalism of Human Rights III. Outlines of a Methodology of Transconstitutionalism 5. Excursus: Limits and Possibilities of Transconstitutionalism in Terms of Empirical Conditions, Functional Requirement and Normative Claim I. Empirical Conditions: Transconstitutionalism versus Asymmetry of the Forms of Law II. Functional Requirement: Beyond Constitutional Utopia and Fragmentation - Promoting a 'Differentiated Communication Order' (System Integration) III. Normative Claim: Beyond Hegemony and Community - Promoting Inclusion ('Social Integration') Final Comment: The Other Can See Your Blind Spot

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