
Redefining Comparative Constitutional Law
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Content
- 1: Rosalind Dixon: How to Compare Constitutionally: An Essay in Honor of Mark Tushnet
- 2: Ran Hirschl: Comparative Constitutional Law: Reflections on a Field Transformed
- 3: Tom Ginsburg and Mila Versteeg: Are Constitutions So Indeterminate that We Cannot Compare Them?
- 4: Sanford Levinson: Mark Tushnet's Central Contribution-and Challenge-to the Enterprise of Comparative Constitutionalism
- 5: David S. Law: Canon and Comparative Constitutional Law
- 6: Kim Lane Scheppele: Foxes, Hedgehogs, and Ants
- 7: Maartje De Visser: Constitutional Comparisons and Language
- 8: Frank I. Michelman: Reasonable Disagreement: Mark Tushnet, John Rawls, and a Democratic Point to Constitutionalism
- 9: Pratap Bhanu Mehta: The Challenge to Liberal Constitutionalism
- 10: Peter Cane: The Architecture of Constitutionalism
- 11: Richard Albert: Global Values in National Constitutions
- 12: Aharon Barak: The Constituent Power and Its Limits
- 13: Cheryl Saunders: Toward Deeper Dialogue: Constitutional and International Law
- 14: David Landau: Ancillary Powers of Constitution-Making Bodies
- 15: Dieter Grimm: Legal Reasoning Matters
- 16: Catherine O'Regan: The Political Paradox of African Constitutionalism Revisited: Kenya's BBI Case
- 17: Jeremy Waldron: Rights as the Domain of Weak-Form Review
- 18: David C. Donald: Common Law and the Liberation of Self-Interest from Regulation
- 19: Po Jen Yap: Dialogic Judicial Review and First World Autocracies
- 20: Yaniv Roznai: We the Fourth Branch? The People as an Institution Protecting Democracy
- 21: Sujit Choudhry: Constitutional Design and Political Parties
- 22: Vicki C. Jackson: Civic Virtue, Civic Obligation, Knowledge Institutions, and Proconstitutional Actors
- 23: Bojan BugariÄ: Popular Constitutionalism during Populist Times
- 24: Cora Chan: Pluralizing Constitutionalism
- 25: Madhav Khosla: Competitive Populism
- 26: Erin F. Delaney: Mapping Power Constitutionalism and Its Colonial Legacy
- 27: Jamal Greene: The Possibilities of Constitutional Tourism
- 28: Mark Tushnet: Constituent Power in Constitutional Theory, with a Note on Language and Method
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