
Constituent Power Is The Power To Create New Constitutions. Since It Is Frequently Exercised During Or After Political Revolutions, It Has Been Historically Associated With Extra-legality And Violations Of The Established Legal Order. This Book Examines The Relationship Between Constituent Power And The Law And The Place Of Constituent Power In Constitutional History, Focusing On The Legal And Institutional Implications That Theorists, Politicians, And Judges Have Derived From It. Since The 18th And 19th Centuries, Commentators And Citizens Have Relied On The Concept Of Constituent Power To Defend The Idea That Electors Have The Right To Instruct Representatives, And That The Creation Of New Constitutions Must Take Place Through Extra-legislative Entities, Such As Primary Assemblies Open To All Citizens. More Recently, Several Latin American Constitutions Explicitly Incorporate The Theory Of Constituent Power And Allow Citizens, Acting Through Popular Initiative, To Trigger Constitution-making Episodes That May Result In The Replacement Of The Entire Constitutional Order. Constitutional Courts Have Employed Constituent Power To Justify Their Jurisdiction To Invalidate Constitutional Amendments That Alter The Fundamental Structure Of The Constitution And Thus Amount To A Constitution-making Exercise. Some Governments Have Reverted To It To Defend The Legality Of Transforming The Constitutional Order Through Procedures Not Contemplated In The Constitution's Amendment Rule, But Considered Participatory Enough To Be Equivalent To 'the People In Action', And These Attempts Have Sometimes Been Sanctioned By Courts. Introduction -- Back To Rousseau -- Sieyès Via Rousseau -- Between Law And Revolution -- Of Constituent Nations -- The Identity And Limits Of The Constituent Subject -- Rejecting Constituent Power -- The Material Constitution -- Sovereignty And Dictatorship -- The Juridical People -- Conclusion. Joel Colón-ríos. Includes Bibliographical References (pages 307
This book investigates the complex relationship between constituent power—the authority to create new constitutions—and the established legal order. Joel I. Colón-Ríos, a scholar of constitutional law, examines how this concept has evolved from 18th-century political theory into a modern legal tool. He analyzes how judges, politicians, and theorists have utilized the idea of 'the people in action' to justify constitutional change, often navigating the tension between revolutionary extra-legality and formal institutional procedures.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and political theorists frequently cite this work as a rigorous examination of the intersection between democratic legitimacy and constitutional stability. Experts highlight the author's ability to bridge abstract philosophical concepts with the practical realities of contemporary judicial decision-making.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
019182769X
ISBN-13:
9780191827693
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