Fr. 70.00

Law and Politics of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments in Asia

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book explains how the idea and practice of unconstitutional constitutional amendments informs politics through various social and political actors, and in both formal and informal amendment processes. It is the first book-length study of the law and politics of unconstitutional constitutional amendments in Asia.

List of contents










Introduction


  1. Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments as Constitutional Politics
  2. Part I: Discursive Model

  3. The Politics Of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment in Japan:The Case of The Pacifist Article 9

  4. 'State Form' in the Theory and Practice of Constitutional Change in Modern China

  5. Unconstitutional Constitution in Vietnamese Discourse
  6. Part II: Denotive Model

  7. The Law and Politics of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments in Malaysia

  8. Amending Constitutional Standards of Parliamentary Piety in Pakistan? Political and Judicial Debates

  9. Limiting Constituent Power? Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments and Time-Bound Constitution Making in Nepal
  10. Part III: Decisive Model

  11. Beyond Unconstitutionality: The Public Oversights of Constitutional Revision in Taiwan

  12. Thailand's Unamendability: Politics of Two Democracies

  13. Constitutional Politics Over (Un)Constitutional Amendments: The Indian Experience

  14. The Politics of Unconstitutional Amendment in Bangladesh
  15. Part IV. Commentaries

  16. The Power of Judicial Nullification in Asia and the World

  17. Is the 'Basic Structure Doctrine' a Basic Structure Doctrine?

  18. Eternity Clauses as Tools for Exclusionary Constitutional Projects

  19. Why There? Explanatory Theories and Institutional Features Behind Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments in Asia


About the author

Rehan Abeyratne is Associate Professor of Law and Executive Director of the Centre for Comparative and Transnational Law at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is a co-editor of Towering Judges: A Comparative Study of Constitutional Judges (2021) as well as the forthcoming Routledge Handbook of Asian Parliaments.
Ngoc Son Bui is Associate Professor of Asian Laws at the University of Oxford Faculty of Law. He is the author of Constitutional Change in the Contemporary Socialist World (2020) and Confucian Constitutionalism in East Asia (Routledge, 2016).

Summary

This book explains how the idea and practice of unconstitutional constitutional amendments informs politics through various social and political actors, and in both formal and informal amendment processes. It is the first book-length study of the law and politics of unconstitutional constitutional amendments in Asia.

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