Reconsidering Constitutional Formation I National Sovereignty : A Comparative Analysis of the Juridification by Constitution.
Material type: TextSeries: Studies in the History of Law and Justice SeriesPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2016Copyright date: {copy}2016Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (296 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319424057Genre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Reconsidering Constitutional Formation I National SovereigntyLOC classification: K3154-3370Online resources: Click to ViewIntro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Contributors -- Juridification by Constitution. National Sovereignty in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Europe -- 1 On ReConFort's Research Programme in General -- 2 Method of Comparative Constitutional History -- 2.1 Targeted Sources of ReConFort -- 2.2 Methodological Challenges: Finding the Tertia Comparationis -- 2.3 Constitutionalisation by Public Sphere -- 2.3.1 Press Media as Roadster of Politicisation -- 2.3.2 Importance of Cross-Border News: The American Revolution in the Polish Public Discourse -- 3 References to the National Sovereignty in the Historic Discourses of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Europe -- 3.1 In General: The Nation's Start as Singular State Organisational Legal Point of Reference -- 3.2 The Various Interpretations of National Sovereignty in the Works of Siey�es -- 3.2.1 Anti-estate Societal Meaning of National Sovereignty -- 3.2.2 Anti-monarchical Meaning of National Sovereignty -- 3.2.3 The National Sovereignty as Idea or Principle of an "ordre nouveau" -- 3.3 Openness of the Political Vocabulary of 1789 for the Rankly Oriented Use of Nation by the French parlements -- 3.4 The Nation in the Polish May-Constitution 1788 -- 3.4.1 Old Republicanism as an Integral Part of the Juridification by Constitution -- 3.4.2 The Procedural Openness of May Constitution as Reflex onto the Juridification of National Sovereignty -- 3.5 National Sovereignty in the C�adiz Constitution 1812 -- 3.5.1 Sovereignty of the Spanish Nation (naci�on espa�nola) -- 3.5.2 Late Scholastic Concepts of the Transfer of Sovereignty (translatio imperii) or the Nation as Moral Entity (cuerpo moral) in the C�adiz Debates -- 3.5.3 The Natural Origin of National Sovereignty as a Limitation for the Monarchical Sovereignty -- 3.5.4 Primacy of the Cortes in the Constitution of C�adiz.
3.5.5 The Legitimisation of the C�adiz Constitution by the Old Fundamental Laws of the Kingdom (las antiguas leyes fundamentales de la Monarqu�ia) -- 3.5.6 Struggle of the realistas for the Monarchical Principle -- 3.5.7 Contemporary Ambigous Evaluation of the C�adiz Constitution -- 3.6 The Constituent Sovereignty in the Norwegian Grunnloven -- 3.6.1 Eidsvoll Debates and the Norwegian Grunnloven of May 17, 1814 -- 3.6.2 Moss Process into the Swedish Union: The Extraordinary Storting as Constituent Assembly and the Fundamental Law of the Norwegian Empire of November 4, 1814 -- 3.6.3 Relationship Between Monarch and Parliament in the Norwegian Grunnloven -- 3.6.4 Monarchical Right to Veto on Constitutional Amendments and the Smooth Transition to the Parliamentary System -- 3.7 The Lack of the Notion Sovereignty in the French Charte Constitutionnelle 1814 -- 4 The Undecisiveness Between Popular and Monarchical Sovereignty in the Constitutional Movement After the French July Revolution 1830 -- 4.1 The Constitutional Movement After the French July Revolution 1830 -- 4.2 Belgian Constitution of 1831 -- 4.3 Parliamentarism in England -- 5 Octroi of the Statuto Albertino 1848 -- 5.1 The Octroi of the Piedmontese Statuto Albertino and the Lack of an Italian Parliamentary Assembly -- 5.2 Italian costituzione flessibile Under the Statuto Albertino -- 5.3 On the Extension of the Statuto Albertino 1848 to Italy 1860: From the Octroi to the Referenda -- 6 Improvised Parliamentarism in the Frankfurt National Assembly -- 7 Summary and Outlook -- References -- National Sovereignty in the Belgian Constitution of 1831. On the Meaning(s) of Article 25 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Parliament Versus King -- 2.1 Parliament as the Sole Representative of the Nation -- 2.2 Congress as the Sole Constituting Power -- 2.3 The Legitimacy of the Senate -- 2.4 Nation Versus King.
2.5 The Royal Veto and the National Will -- 2.6 Republican Monarchism -- 2.7 The King-Magistrate -- 2.8 The Constitutional Powers of the King -- 3 National or Popular Sovereignty? -- 3.1 A False Opposition -- 3.2 The Limitation of Political Participation -- 4 Reception -- 4.1 The Contested Nature of Popular Sovereignty -- 4.2 Legal Order, Legitimate Representation and Political Participation -- 5 Conclusions -- 6 Summaries (French & -- Dutch) -- 6.1 La souverainet�e de la Nation dans la Constitution belge de 1831. Sur les significations de l'article 25 -- 6.2 Nationale soevereiniteit in de Belgische Grondwet van 1831. Over de betekenis(sen) van artikel 25 -- References -- The Omnipotence of Parliament in the Legitimisation Process of 'Representative Government' under the Albertine Statute (1848-1861) -- 1 Parliament, Consensus and Public Opinion -- 2 Between Lemmas and Culture -- 2.1 Constitution and Sovereignty Within the 'Consiglio di Conferenza'. Some Choices Between Political Opportunity and Juridical Reasoning -- 2.2 Culture, Foreign Models and Coeval Experiences -- 2.3 The Sovereign Power between Dictionaries, Political Catechisms and Newspapers -- 2.3.1 Dictionaries -- 2.3.2 Political Catechisms -- 2.3.3 Newspapers -- 3 The Represented "Nation": A Pact Between Sovereign and People, the Force of the Constitution and Political Representation -- 4 From Words to Practice. Initial Steps of the 'Representative Government' -- 4.1 Massimo D'Azeglio and the Defence of the Representative Government -- 5 Towards National Unification -- 6 Conclusion -- 7 Summary (Italian) -- References -- The Sovereignty Issue in the Public Discussion in the Era of the Polish 3rd May Constitution (1788-1792) -- 1 Introductory Remarks -- 2 Planes of Discussion -- 3 Characteristics of Sources -- 4 Some Aspects of the Discourse on Sovereignty in the Poland of Enlightenment.
4.1 Sovereignty as a Theoretical Problem -- 4.1.1 Introduction -- 4.1.2 'Sovereignty' in Media and Free Prints Debate -- 4.1.3 'Sovereignty' in Parliamentary Debate -- 4.1.4 'Sovereignty' in Legal Acts -- 4.2 The Nation -- 4.2.1 Introduction -- 4.2.2 'The Nation' in the Media and Printed Materials -- 4.2.3 'The Nation' in the Parliamentary Debate -- 4.2.4 'The Nation' in Constitutional Acts -- 4.3 The Monarch as a Sovereign -- 4.3.1 Introduction -- 4.3.2 The Monarch in the Debate of Public Media -- 4.3.3 The Monarch in the Parliamentary Debate -- 4.3.4 The Monarch in the Constitutional Acts -- 5 Summary -- 6 Summary (Polish) -- References -- Appendix -- Our Free Royal Cities in the States of the Rzeczpospolita of April 18, 1791 -- Article I -- On the Cities -- Article II -- On the Rights of the Town Citizens -- Article III -- On the Justice for the Citizens -- About the Authors -- Index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2023. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
There are no comments on this title.