“Legitimation by Constitution” is the authors’ name for a key idea in Rawlsian political liberalism, for a reliance on a dualist form of democracy – a subjection of ground-level lawmaking to the constraints of a higher-law constitution that most or all citizens could find acceptable as a framework for their politics – as a response to the problem of a liberally just and stable yet oppression-free democratic government in conditions of pluralist visionary conflict. This book recalls, collects, and combines a series of exchanges over the years between the two authors inspired by Rawls’s encapsulation of this conception in a proposed “liberal principle of legitimacy.” From a shared standpoint of sympathetic identification with the political-...
When people gather to celebrate the contributions of a preeminent scholar like Frank Michelman, the ...
This article critically discusses the normative definition of liberal-democratic constitutional theo...
“We the People” and the corresponding concept of constitutional authorship have gripped our imagina...
“Legitimation by Constitution” is the authors’ name for a key idea in Rawlsian political liberalism,...
This contribution deals with constitutional democracy within the nor-mative liberal-democratic parad...
Every cohort of voters may dream of being ‘the people’, under the sway of serial visions of sovereig...
This essay follows Professors Alessandro Ferrara and Frank Michelman’s dialogic journey into the leg...
This book rereads seven pivotal 20th century jurisprudential and political philosophical positions r...
Abstract. In the latest volume of Bruce Ackerman’s We the People, he sets out to demonstrate that th...
Panel Session 3Commenting on the recent revival of interest in his 1995 exchange with John Rawls, Jü...
This paper examines the extent to which Ronald Dworkin\u27s liberal constitutionalism, as presented ...
This book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our everyday le...
This open access book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our...
This book investigates the unresolved issue of democratic legitimacy in contexts of pervasive disagr...
Reformulating a problem of both constitutionalism and liberalism discussed in the works of Ernst-Wol...
When people gather to celebrate the contributions of a preeminent scholar like Frank Michelman, the ...
This article critically discusses the normative definition of liberal-democratic constitutional theo...
“We the People” and the corresponding concept of constitutional authorship have gripped our imagina...
“Legitimation by Constitution” is the authors’ name for a key idea in Rawlsian political liberalism,...
This contribution deals with constitutional democracy within the nor-mative liberal-democratic parad...
Every cohort of voters may dream of being ‘the people’, under the sway of serial visions of sovereig...
This essay follows Professors Alessandro Ferrara and Frank Michelman’s dialogic journey into the leg...
This book rereads seven pivotal 20th century jurisprudential and political philosophical positions r...
Abstract. In the latest volume of Bruce Ackerman’s We the People, he sets out to demonstrate that th...
Panel Session 3Commenting on the recent revival of interest in his 1995 exchange with John Rawls, Jü...
This paper examines the extent to which Ronald Dworkin\u27s liberal constitutionalism, as presented ...
This book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our everyday le...
This open access book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our...
This book investigates the unresolved issue of democratic legitimacy in contexts of pervasive disagr...
Reformulating a problem of both constitutionalism and liberalism discussed in the works of Ernst-Wol...
When people gather to celebrate the contributions of a preeminent scholar like Frank Michelman, the ...
This article critically discusses the normative definition of liberal-democratic constitutional theo...
“We the People” and the corresponding concept of constitutional authorship have gripped our imagina...