Thursday, July 4, 2024

New Issue: Global Constitutionalism

The latest issue of Global Constitutionalism (Vol. 13, no. 1, March 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Article
    • Stephanie Law, Jo Shaw, Jonathan Havercroft, Susan Kang, & Antje Wiener, Private law, private international law and public interest litigation
  • Agora: Ocean Governance
    • Jonathan Havercroft & Alice Kloker, A constitution for the ocean? An agora on ocean governance
    • Chris Armstrong, The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, global justice and the environment
    • Katherine Louise Hill, Reflections on international ocean science and ocean governance: Can our global structures rise to the occasion?
    • Emma McKinley, Ocean literacy for an Ocean constitution
  • Articles
    • Maartje De Visser & Brian Christopher Jones, Unpacking constitutional literacy
    • Chao Wang, Hong Kong in the age of the PRC’s alienation from the international system: In search of normative consensus
    • Mauro Arturo Rivera León, Judicial review of supermajority rules governing courts’ own decision-making: A comparative analysis
    • Tom Theuns, Is the European Union a militant democracy? Democratic backsliding and EU disintegration
    • Amal Sethi, Looking beyond the constituent power theory: The theory of equitable elite bargaining
  • Symposium
    • Sergio Verdugo & Luis Eugenio García-Huidobro, How do constitution-making processes fail? The case of Chile’s Constitutional Convention (2021–22)
    • Luis Eugenio García-Huidobro, Elite non-cooperation in polarized democracies: Constitution-making deferral, the entry referendum and the seeds of the Chilean failure
    • Tom Ginsburg & Isabel Álvarez, It’s the procedures, stupid: The success and failures of Chile’s Constitutional Convention
    • María Cristina Escudero, Institutional resistance: The case of the Chilean Convention 2021–22
    • Valeria Palanza & Patricia Sotomayor Valarezo, Chile’s failed constitutional intent: Polarization, fragmentation, haste and delegitimization
    • Rosalind Dixon & Marcela Prieto Rudolphy, Parity constitutionalism
    • Adam Chilton, Cristián Eyzaguirre, & Mila Versteeg, Social rights scapegoating
    • David Landau & Rosalind Dixon, Utopian constitutionalism in Chile
    • José Francisco García, A failed but useful constitution-making process: How Bachelet’s process contributed to constitution-making in Chile
    • Sergio Verdugo, Constitutions as moving targets