
The latest issue of
Global Constitutionalism (Vol. 13, no. 3, November 2024) is out. Contents include:
- Hinako Takata, Separation of powers in a globalized democratic society: Theorizing the human rights treaty organs’ interactions with various state organs
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Angelo Jr Golia, Critique of digital constitutionalism: Deconstruction and reconstruction from a societal perspective
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Virgílio Afonso da Silva, Balancing may be everywhere, but the proportionality test is not
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Tore Vincents Olsen & Juha Tuovinen, Between militant democracy and citizen vigilantism: Using citizens’ assemblies to keep parties democratic
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Lucas Henrique Muniz Da Conceição, A constitutional reflector? Assessing societal and digital constitutionalism in Meta’s Oversight Board
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Nicholas Aroney, George Duke, & Stephen Tierney, A theory of plural constituent power for federal systems
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Alan Greene, Hegemonic constituent power: Fear of the people and lessons for Irish reunification
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Giuliano Espino, Which global constitution? The illiberal globalism of the US Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision
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Janne Mende, Liberal-democratic norms under contestation: Norm relations and their decoupling in the US Supreme Court’s decisions on abortion