I argue that legal and constitutional theory should avoid the idea of constituent power. It is unhelpful in seeking to understand the authority of law and the place of written constitutions in such an understanding. In particular, it results in a deep ambivalence about whether authority is located within or without the legal order. That ambivalence also manifests itself within positivist legal theory, which explains the affinity between theories of constituent power and legal positivist accounts of authority. Legal theory should then focus on the question of law's authority as one entirely internal to legal order, thus making the question of constituent power superfluous. (author's abstract
The idea of limited government is the key to constitutionalism in the traditional understanding of t...
In times of crisis it is necessary to revisit the theorization of radical change and the mechanisms ...
Some constitutional theorists have started looking to jurisprudential accounts of the nature of law ...
I argue that legal and constitutional theory should avoid the idea of constituent power. It is unhel...
According to the theory of constituent power, only the people can legitimately create constitutional...
The force of a constitution, like the force of all enacted law, derives, in significant part, from t...
This article examines the changing status of constituent power in contemporary constitutionalism. It...
This article examines the meaning and significance of the concept of constituent power in constituti...
The article discusses the nature and role of constituent power in contemporary constitutional democr...
This Article delves into the question of the boundaries of constitution-making power. Traditionally,...
The constituent power of the people is one of the fundamental ideas of modern politics. It was first...
My aim in this Paper is to analyze Professor Richard Kay’s notion of ‘constituent authority’ within ...
This essay explores the concept of constituent power in the light of recent constitutional developme...
The power to make constitutions (the so-called constituent power) is predominantly understood today ...
That ‘the people’ is a representative claim is accepted by many democratic theorists. Many of these...
The idea of limited government is the key to constitutionalism in the traditional understanding of t...
In times of crisis it is necessary to revisit the theorization of radical change and the mechanisms ...
Some constitutional theorists have started looking to jurisprudential accounts of the nature of law ...
I argue that legal and constitutional theory should avoid the idea of constituent power. It is unhel...
According to the theory of constituent power, only the people can legitimately create constitutional...
The force of a constitution, like the force of all enacted law, derives, in significant part, from t...
This article examines the changing status of constituent power in contemporary constitutionalism. It...
This article examines the meaning and significance of the concept of constituent power in constituti...
The article discusses the nature and role of constituent power in contemporary constitutional democr...
This Article delves into the question of the boundaries of constitution-making power. Traditionally,...
The constituent power of the people is one of the fundamental ideas of modern politics. It was first...
My aim in this Paper is to analyze Professor Richard Kay’s notion of ‘constituent authority’ within ...
This essay explores the concept of constituent power in the light of recent constitutional developme...
The power to make constitutions (the so-called constituent power) is predominantly understood today ...
That ‘the people’ is a representative claim is accepted by many democratic theorists. Many of these...
The idea of limited government is the key to constitutionalism in the traditional understanding of t...
In times of crisis it is necessary to revisit the theorization of radical change and the mechanisms ...
Some constitutional theorists have started looking to jurisprudential accounts of the nature of law ...