
The latest issue of
Global Constitutionalism (Vol. 8, no. 3, November 2019) is out. Contents include:
- Jo Shaw, ‘Shunning’ and ‘seeking’ membership: Rethinking citizenship regimes in the European constitutional space
-
Mohamed S Helal, Anarchy, ordering principles and the constitutive regime of the international system
-
Karin M Fierke & Vivienne Jabri, Global conversations: Relationality, embodiment and power in the move towards a Global IR
-
Tarunabh Khaitan, Political insurance for the (relative) poor: How liberal constitutionalism could resist plutocracy
-
Diana Panke, Franziska Hohlstein, & Gurur Polat, The constitutions of international organisations: How institutional design seeks to foster diplomatic deliberation
-
Kári Hólmar Ragnarsson, The counter-majoritarian difficulty in a neoliberal world: Socio-economic rights and deference in post-2008 austerity cases
-
Lars Viellechner, The transnational dimension of constitutional rights: Framing and taming ‘private’ governance beyond the state