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COMPARATIVE MATTERS. THE RENAISSANCE OF COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Título:
COMPARATIVE MATTERS. THE RENAISSANCE OF COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Subtítulo:
Autor:
HIRSCHL, R
Editorial:
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Año de edición:
2016
ISBN:
978-0-19-871452-1
Páginas:
304
18,88 €

 

Sinopsis

Winner of the 2015 APSA C. Herman Pritchett Award for the best book on law & courts
The first book to examine the analytical foundations, epistemology, and methodologies of comparative constitutional law
Fills a major gap for a sustained analysis of the role and methods of comparative constitutional studies, providing a roadmap for the field´s development that will be essential reading for all those engaged with it
Provides a genuinely interdisciplinary approach, combining insights from social theory, comparative politics, religion, history, and public law
Traces the historical development of the field, including its early origins and antecedents in pre- and early-modern law
Explores the political foundations of the use of foreign citations in supreme courts



Comparative study has emerged as the new frontier of constitutional law scholarship as well as an important aspect of constitutional adjudication. Increasingly, jurists, scholars, and constitution drafters worldwide are accepting that ´we are all comparativists now´. And yet, despite this tremendous renaissance, the ´comparative´ aspect of the enterprise, as a method and a project, remains under-theorized and blurry. Fundamental questions concerning the very meaning and purpose of comparative constitutional inquiry, and how it is to be undertaken, are seldom asked, let alone answered. In this path-breaking book, Ran Hirschl addresses this gap by charting the intellectual history and analytical underpinnings of comparative constitutional inquiry, probing the various types, aims, and methodologies of engagement with the constitutive laws of others through the ages, and exploring how and why comparative constitutional inquiry has been and ought to be pursued by academics and jurists worldwide.

Through an extensive exploration of comparative constitutional endeavours past and present, near and far, Hirschl shows how attitudes towards engagement with the constitutive laws of others reflect tensions between particularism and universalism as well as competing visions of who ´we´ are as a political community. Drawing on insights from social theory, religion, history, political science, and public law, Hirschl argues for an interdisciplinary approach to comparative constitutionalism that is methodologically and substantively preferable to merely doctrinal accounts. The future of comparative constitutional studies, he contends, lies in relaxing the sharp divide between constitutional law and the social sciences.

Comparative Matters makes a unique and welcome contribution to the comparative study of constitutions and constitutionalism, sharpening our understanding of the historical development, political parameters, epistemology, and methodologies of one of the most intellectually vibrant areas in contemporary legal scholarship.



Table of Contents

Introduction: The C Word
1: The View from the Bench: Where the Comparative Judicial Imagination Travels
2: Early Engagements with the Constitutive Laws of Others: Lessons from Pre-Modern Religion Law
3: Engaging the Constitutive Laws of Others: Necessities, Ideas, Interests
4: From Comparative Constitutional Law to Comparative Constitutional Studies
5: How Universal is Comparative Constitutional Law?
6: Case Selection and Research Design in Comparative Constitutional Studies
Epilogue: Comparative Constitutional Law: Quo Vadis?