Publication:
A Sociology of Transnational Constitutions: Social Foundations of the Post-National Legal Structure
A Sociology of Transnational Constitutions: Social Foundations of the Post-National Legal Structure
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Date
2016
Authors
Chris Thornhill
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Research Projects
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Abstract
This volume focuses on the rise of transnational constitutional laws, primarily created by the interaction between national and international courts and by the domestic transformation of international law. Through detailed analysis of patterns of institutional formation at key historical junctures in a number of national societies, it examines the social processes that have locked national states into an increasingly transnational constitutional order, and it explains how the growth of global constitutional norms has provided a stabilizing framework for the functions of state institutions. The book adopts a distinctive historical-sociological approach to these questions, examining the deep continuities between national constitutional law and contemporary models of global law. The volume makes an important contribution to the sociology of constitutional law, to the sociology of post-national legal processes, and to the sociology of human rights law
Description
Publisher: Cambridge University Press ; License: CC BY-NC-ND ; Source: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139833905 ; 528 pages
Keywords
national political system,
classical constitutional formula,
Constitutional rights,
The crisis of social inclusion,
post-national legal structure