
Constitutional Referendums
The Theory and Practice of Republican Deliberation
Stephen Tierney(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 5. April 2012
Book
Hardback
354 pages
978-0-19-959279-1 (ISBN)
Description
The use of referendums around the world has grown remarkably in the past thirty years and, in particular, referendums are today deployed more than ever in the settlement of constitutional questions, even in countries with little or no tradition of direct democracy. This is the first book by a constitutional theorist to address the implications of this development for constitutional democracy in a globalizing age, when many of the older certainties surrounding sovereignty and constitutional authority are coming under scrutiny.
The book identifies four substantive constitutional processes where the referendum is regularly used today: the founding of new states; the creation or amendment of constitutions; the establishment of complex new models of sub-state autonomy, particularly in multinational states; and the transfer of sovereign powers from European states to the European Union. The book, as a study in constitutional theory, addresses the challenges this phenomenon poses not only for particular constitutional orders, which are typically structured around a representative model of democracy, but for constitutional theory more broadly.
The main theoretical focus of the book is the relationship between the referendum and democracy. It addresses the standard criticisms which the referendum is subjected to by democratic theorists and deploys both civic republican theory and the recent turn in deliberative democracy to ask whether by good process-design the constitutional referendum is capable of facilitating the engagement of citizens in deliberative acts of constitution-making. With the referendum firmly established as a fixture of contemporary constitutionalism, the book addresses the key question for constitutional theorists and practitioners of how might its operation be made more democratic in age of constitutional transformation.
The book identifies four substantive constitutional processes where the referendum is regularly used today: the founding of new states; the creation or amendment of constitutions; the establishment of complex new models of sub-state autonomy, particularly in multinational states; and the transfer of sovereign powers from European states to the European Union. The book, as a study in constitutional theory, addresses the challenges this phenomenon poses not only for particular constitutional orders, which are typically structured around a representative model of democracy, but for constitutional theory more broadly.
The main theoretical focus of the book is the relationship between the referendum and democracy. It addresses the standard criticisms which the referendum is subjected to by democratic theorists and deploys both civic republican theory and the recent turn in deliberative democracy to ask whether by good process-design the constitutional referendum is capable of facilitating the engagement of citizens in deliberative acts of constitution-making. With the referendum firmly established as a fixture of contemporary constitutionalism, the book addresses the key question for constitutional theorists and practitioners of how might its operation be made more democratic in age of constitutional transformation.
Reviews / Votes
Given that CR are an ever-growing global phenomenon, the book is timely. It is also well informed and persuasive. * Inigo Gonzalez-Ricoy, Political Studies Review *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
693 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-959279-1 (9780199592791)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
04/2012
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€32.99
Available for download

E-Book
04/2012
1st Edition
Oxford University Press
€179.50
Available for download
Person
Stephen Tierney is Professor of Constitutional Theory, School of Law, University of Edinburgh and Director of the Edinburgh Centre for Constitutional Law. He received a British Academy Senior Research Fellowship for the project upon which this book is based. He has published seven other books including Constitutional Law and National Pluralism (Oxford University Press 2004).
Content
1. Introduction ; 2. Beyond Representation: Constitutional Referendums and Deliberative Democracy ; 3. Framing 'the People': Constitutional Referendums and the Demos Question ; 4. Elite Control and the Referendum Process ; 5. Control and Constitutional Referendums: Internal Sovereignty ; 6. Control and Constitutional Referendums: External Influences ; 7. Participation in Constitutional Referendums ; 8. Framing the Substantive Issue in Constitutional Referendums ; 9. Referendums and Constitutional Decision-Making ; 10. Conclusions