This article traces the pathways of constitutional development in five major Asian nations-India, China, Korea, Japan, and Indonesia. It considers whether constitutionalism in its Western form may be regarded as having universal appeal and application far beyond the Western nations in which it originated, and whether it may be argued that there exists a distinctly Asian form of constitutionalism or of political-constitutional practices. Adopting a macrohistorical and comparative perspective on developments in these five nations, from the late nineteenth century up to the present, the article demonstrates that constitutionalism has significantly broadened and deepened its reach in Asia in modern and contemporary times. It also suggests that ...