Identifies how and why 'dialogue' can describe and evaluate institutional interactions over constitutional questions concerning democracy and rights.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
1. Introduction: the 'what' and 'why' of constitutional dialogue Geoffrey Sigalet, Grégoire Webber and Rosalind Dixon; Part I. Dialogue and Democracy: 2. Dialogue and its myths Alison Young; 3. Departmentalism and dialogue Jacob T. Levy; 4. On dialogue and domination Geoffrey Sigalet; Part II. Dialogue and Institutions: 5. Past, present, and justice in the exercise of judicial responsibility Grégoire Webber; 6. Dialogue and deference Rosalind Dixon; 7. Dialogue, finality, and legality Jeff King; Part III. Dialogue and Rights: 8. Canada's notwithstanding clause, dialogue, and constitutional identities Dwight Newman; 9. Intra-parliamentary dialogues in New Zealand and the UK Janet L. Hiebert and James B. Kelly; 10. Dialogue in Canada and the dangers of simplified comparative law and populism Kent Roach; 11. Bills of rights with strings attached: protecting the past from judicial review Rivka Weill; Part IV. Case Studies of Dialogue: 12. Prisoners' voting and judges' powers John Finnis; 13. 'All's well that ends well?' Same-sex marriage and constitutional dialogue Stephen Macedo; 14. A feature, not a bug: a co-ordinate moment in Canadian constitutionalism Dennis Baker; Part V. International and Transnational Dialogues: 15. Dialogue and its discontents Frederick Schauer; 16. Constitutional conversations in Britain (and Europe) Richard Ekins.
1. Introduction: the 'what' and 'why' of constitutional dialogue Geoffrey Sigalet, Grégoire Webber and Rosalind Dixon; Part I. Dialogue and Democracy: 2. Dialogue and its myths Alison Young; 3. Departmentalism and dialogue Jacob T. Levy; 4. On dialogue and domination Geoffrey Sigalet; Part II. Dialogue and Institutions: 5. Past, present, and justice in the exercise of judicial responsibility Grégoire Webber; 6. Dialogue and deference Rosalind Dixon; 7. Dialogue, finality, and legality Jeff King; Part III. Dialogue and Rights: 8. Canada's notwithstanding clause, dialogue, and constitutional identities Dwight Newman; 9. Intra-parliamentary dialogues in New Zealand and the UK Janet L. Hiebert and James B. Kelly; 10. Dialogue in Canada and the dangers of simplified comparative law and populism Kent Roach; 11. Bills of rights with strings attached: protecting the past from judicial review Rivka Weill; Part IV. Case Studies of Dialogue: 12. Prisoners' voting and judges' powers John Finnis; 13. 'All's well that ends well?' Same-sex marriage and constitutional dialogue Stephen Macedo; 14. A feature, not a bug: a co-ordinate moment in Canadian constitutionalism Dennis Baker; Part V. International and Transnational Dialogues: 15. Dialogue and its discontents Frederick Schauer; 16. Constitutional conversations in Britain (and Europe) Richard Ekins.
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