In Constitutional Idolatry and Democracy: Challenging the Infatuation with Writtenness, Brian Christopher Jones contests the claim that a written constitution would benefit UK democracy to instead make the case for a more holistic interpretation of constitutional efficacy. This is a broad, engaging and well-researched contribution to the constitutional law literature, writes William N. Brown. Constitutional Idolatry and Democracy: Challenging the Infatuation with Writtenness. Brian Christopher Jones. Edward Elgar. 2020
In Value, Conflict, and Order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the Realist Revival in Political The...
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Ed Jones explores two books from Bill Kissane and David Armitage that reflect on the history of civi...
In Constitutional Idolatry and Democracy: Challenging the Infatuation with Writtenness, Brian Christ...
Electoral systems are key components in the operation of representative democracies that vary consid...
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In Everyday Nationhood: Theorising Culture, Identity and Belonging after Banal Nationalism, edited b...
Is democracy in crisis? In How Democracy Ends, David Runciman offers a compelling and convincing acc...
In Democracy Under Threat, editor Surendra Munshi brings together twenty contributors to explore the...
In Political English: Language and the Decay of Politics, Thomas Docherty offers a new examination o...
The UK seems to be rapidly heading for one of the most tangled and tumultuous political periods in m...
According to Robert Talisse, ‘we have sufficient epistemological reasons to be democrats’ and these ...
In Government by Referendum, Matt Qvortrup makes the case that rather than pose a challenge to democ...
In Government by Referendum, Matt Qvortrup makes the case that rather than pose a challenge to democ...
In Anti-System Politics: The Crisis of Market Liberalism in Rich Democracies, Jonathan Hopkin studie...
In Value, Conflict, and Order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the Realist Revival in Political The...
In Capital and Ideology, Thomas Piketty proposes a vision for a fairer economic system grounded in ‘...
Ed Jones explores two books from Bill Kissane and David Armitage that reflect on the history of civi...
In Constitutional Idolatry and Democracy: Challenging the Infatuation with Writtenness, Brian Christ...
Electoral systems are key components in the operation of representative democracies that vary consid...
In The Sit-Ins: Protest and Legal Change in the Civil Rights Era, Christopher W. Schmidt offers a ne...
In Everyday Nationhood: Theorising Culture, Identity and Belonging after Banal Nationalism, edited b...
Is democracy in crisis? In How Democracy Ends, David Runciman offers a compelling and convincing acc...
In Democracy Under Threat, editor Surendra Munshi brings together twenty contributors to explore the...
In Political English: Language and the Decay of Politics, Thomas Docherty offers a new examination o...
The UK seems to be rapidly heading for one of the most tangled and tumultuous political periods in m...
According to Robert Talisse, ‘we have sufficient epistemological reasons to be democrats’ and these ...
In Government by Referendum, Matt Qvortrup makes the case that rather than pose a challenge to democ...
In Government by Referendum, Matt Qvortrup makes the case that rather than pose a challenge to democ...
In Anti-System Politics: The Crisis of Market Liberalism in Rich Democracies, Jonathan Hopkin studie...
In Value, Conflict, and Order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the Realist Revival in Political The...
In Capital and Ideology, Thomas Piketty proposes a vision for a fairer economic system grounded in ‘...
Ed Jones explores two books from Bill Kissane and David Armitage that reflect on the history of civi...