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Informationen zum Autor Vicki C. Jackson, Laurence H. Tribe Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School, wrote Constitutional Engagement in a Transnational Era (2010), co-authored (with Mark Tushnet) Comparative Constitutional Law (3d. ed. 2014) and Defining the Field of Comparative Constitutional Law (2002), and has written widely on comparative and U.S. constitutional law. A member of the American Law Institute, she has served on various academic boards including the International Association of Constitutional Law's Executive Committee. Yasmin Dawood is the Canada Research Chair in Democracy, Constitutionalism, and Electoral Law, and an Associate Professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Toronto. She has published widely on voting rights, comparative election law, and the theory and practice of democratic constitutionalism. She was named a member of the Royal Society of Canada College in 2018, and she has served on academic boards including the Executive Committee of the International Association of Constitutional Law and the Council of the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy. Klappentext "Comparative constitutional law is an intellectually vibrant field that encompasses an increasingly broad array of approaches and methodologies. This series collects analytically innovative and empirically grounded work from scholars of comparative constitutionalism across academic disciplines. Books in the series include theoretically informed studies of single constitutional jurisdictions, comparative studies of constitutional law and institutions, and edited collections of original essays that respond to challenging theoretical and empirical questions in the field"-- Vorwort This interdisciplinary volume highlights the essential role of effective government in sustaining democratic constitutionalism. Zusammenfassung This interdisciplinary volume highlights the crucial role of effective government in sustaining democratic constitutionalism. In each chapter, leaders in the fields of constitutional law and politics provide innovative analyses of the relationships between effective government and democratic constitutionalism, its principles, and its institutions. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: 1. 'To secure these Rights': Constitutionalism and effective Government Vicki C. Jackson and Yasmin Dawood; Part I. What are Constitutions for?: 2. Resolution and accommodation in the good constitution Nicholas Barber; 3. Effective governance and the social dimension of the rule of law Jeff King; 4. Effective government and the two faces of constitutionalism Yasmin Dawood; 5. The right to effective self-government Katharina Pistor; Part II. Positive Rights and Rights to Effective Self-Government: 6. Post-liberal constitutionalism and the right to effective government David S. Law; 7. Does the first amendment forbid, permit, or require government support of News Industries? Martha Minow; 8. The 'Right to effective governance' and the Human rights baseline Gerald L. Neuman; Part III. Role of Courts in Building State Capacity and Promoting Effective Self-Government While Protecting Rights: 9. The unconstitutional state of affairs doctrine Manuel José Cepeda Espinosa and Guillermo Otálora Lozano; 10. Courts and effective governance Mark Tushnet and Madhav Khosla; 11. The new Managerialism: Courts, Positive duties, and Economic and Social Rights Katharine G. Young; Part IV. The Essential Roles of Executive and Administrative Constitutionalism: 12. What does effective government have to do with the constitution? Gillian E. Metzger; 13. The president's two bodies Daphna Renan; Part V. Legislatures, Representation and Duties of Effective Self-Government?: 14. Legislatures and effective government: Raising expectations for representatives Vicki C. Jackson; 15. Constitutional directives and the duty to govern well Tarunabh Khaitan; 16. Recursive representation: The bas...