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Description
The Oxford Handbook of Constituent Power maps and systematically examines the revival of constituent power. In recent decades, scholars, as well as political actors, have rediscovered the category and used it in ever new ways, challenging traditional accounts of its scope and function. But while new and creative applications may have inspired political developments and led to innovation in political and constitutional theory, the proliferation of accounts of constituent power has brought with it some concept stretching. This Handbook takes inventory of the state of the art, critically examines new ideas, and puts them on a systematic footing. In sixty chapters, it explores new paths in the intellectual history of constituent power (Part I); systematically develops the idea of constituent power in its relation to neighbouring concepts such as sovereignty (Part II); examines constituent power’s role and meaning in the context of different types of polities, including international institutions such as the European Union and the United Nations (Part III); investigates the plural manifestations of constituent power in terms of practices and agents, ranging from revolutionary violence to citizens’ assemblies (Part IV); and tackles new challenges and developments such as the prefigurative politics of protest movements or ascriptions of constituent power to nature (Part V).
Table of Contents
- 1: Peter Niesen, Markus Patberg, Lucia Rubinelli: The Revival of Constituent Power
- I Intellectual History
- 2: George Duke: The Aristotelian Founding: Legislator and Constituent Power
- 3: John P. McCormick: The People as 'Guardian of Liberty': Machiavelli's Proto-Constituent Power
- 4: Sandra Leonie Field: Hobbesian Origins and Hobbesian Criticisms of the Constituent Power Tradition
- 5: Filippo Del Lucchese: Right and Constituent Power in Spinoza
- 6: Joel Colón-Ríos: Rousseau, Constituent Power and the Referendum
- 7: Thomas Poole: Locke on the 'True Foundations' of Government
- 8: Angus Brown: Sieyès, Constituent Power, and Revolution
- 9: Adam Lebovitz: Constituent Power in the American Revolution
- 10: Jeanette Ehrmann: Haiti's Constitutional Revolutions
- 11: Peter Niesen: Bentham: Sovereignty and Constitutive Authority
- 12: Andreas Kalyvas: Constituent Power in Karl Marx: Revolution and Dictatorship
- 13: Duncan Kelly: Egon Zweig and Constituent Power as Habsburg Modernism
- 14: Florian Meinel: Violence and Acclamation. Carl Schmitt's Theory of Constituent Power
- 15: Clara Maier: Hannah Arendt on Constituent Power
- 16: Lucia Rubinelli: Constituent Power and Democracy in Early Twentieth Century France
- 17: Tim Wihl: Post-WWII German Theorists of Constituent Power- Böckenförde and Maus
- 18: Marco Goldoni: Constituent Power in 20th Century Italian Constitutional Doctrine
- 19: Carlos Pérez Crespo: Constituent Dictatorship: A Latin American Tradition
- 20: Andrew March: The Question of Constituent Power in Modern Islamic Thought
- 21: Joy Wang: Pan-African Conceptions of Constituent Power
- 22: Nazmul Sultan: Constituent Power in India. The People and Its Transformation
- 23: Emilios Christodoulidis: Antonio Negri, Labour, and Constituent Power
- 24: Christopher Zurn: Habermas: A Bootstrapping Conception of National and Transnational Constituent Power
- 25: Alessandro Ferrara: Constituent Power in Political Liberalism
- II Conceptual Fields
- 26: Simone Chambers: Constituent Power and Popular Sovereignty
- 27: Jean L. Cohen: Populism and Constituent Power
- 28: Andrew Arato: Post-sovereign Constituent Power
- 29: Nadia Urbinati: Constituent Power and Pluralist Democracy
- 30: Oliver Gerstenberg): Constituent Power as Procedure: Constitutional Rights and the Role of Courts
- 31: Philip Pettit: Constituent Power with Checks and Balances
- 32: Miguel Vatter: Political Theology and Constituent Power
- 33: Mónica Brito Vieira: Representation and Constituent Power
- 34: Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen: Radical Democracy and Constituent Power
- 35: Camila Vergara: The People and Constituent Power
- III Polities
- 36: Nicolas Aroney: Federal vs. Unitary Constituent Power
- 37: Stephen Tierney: Pluralising Constituent Power? Sub-State Nationalism in the United Kingdom and Spain
- 38: Eva Marlene Hausteiner: Varieties of Federalism and Re-Constituent Power
- 39: Melissa S. Williams and Dale A. Turner: Indigenous Constituent Power
- 40: Dorothea Gädeke: Towards the Internationalization of Constituent Power? On Foreign Domination in Domestic
- 41: Paul Blokker: European Integration and Constituent Power
- 42: Samantha Besson: We the Peoples of the United Nations: From Single Separate Instituent Powers to Multiple Nested Re-Instituted Publics
- 43: Markus Patberg: Exit: Secession and Withdrawal
- IV Manifestations: Practices and Agents
- 44: Kevin Duong: Revolutionary Violence
- 45: Jason Frank: The Aesthetics of Constituent Power
- 46: Chiara Valentini: Constituent Assemblies
- 47: Alice el-Wakil: Referendums and Constituent Power
- 48: Yves Sintomer: Citizens' Assemblies and Mini-Publics
- 49: William E. Scheuerman: Constituent Power and Civil Disobedience
- 50: Fabio Wolkenstein: Parties and Constituent Power
- 51: Angélica María Bernal: The Constituent President
- 52: Nomi Claire Lazar: Emergency and Constituent Power
- V Developments and Challenges
- 53: Kolja Möller: Destituent Power: From Anti-Hegemonic Resistance to New Balances of Power
- 54: Michael A. Wilkinson: Constituent Power and the Material Constitution
- 55: Ruth Houghton and Aoife O'Donoghue: Feminist Approaches to Constituent Power
- 56: Matthijs van de Sande: Prefiguration: Non-Juridical and Non-Statist Conceptions of Constituent Power
- 57: Hans Agné: Cosmopolitan Constituent Power: From Humanity to Democracy
- 58: Diego Rossello: The Foreigner
- 59: Andreas Gutmann: Constituent Power of Nature
- 60: Jonathan White: Vanishing Point: How the Future Shapes Constituent Power
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