Book contents
- From Parchment to Practice
- Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy
- From Parchment to Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I The Problem of Transformation in Constitutional Design
- 2 Looking “Backward” or “Forward” to American Constitutional Development
- 3 Marking Constitutional Transitions
- 4 India’s First Period
- 5 Two Steps “Forward,” One Step “Back”?
- Part II The Issue of Gender
- Part III Institutional Development and the Role of Courts
- Part IV Authoritarian Transitions
- Index
2 - Looking “Backward” or “Forward” to American Constitutional Development
Reflections on Constitutional “Endurance” and “Adaptation” in the “First Republic”
from Part I - The Problem of Transformation in Constitutional Design
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2020
- From Parchment to Practice
- Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy
- From Parchment to Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I The Problem of Transformation in Constitutional Design
- 2 Looking “Backward” or “Forward” to American Constitutional Development
- 3 Marking Constitutional Transitions
- 4 India’s First Period
- 5 Two Steps “Forward,” One Step “Back”?
- Part II The Issue of Gender
- Part III Institutional Development and the Role of Courts
- Part IV Authoritarian Transitions
- Index
Summary
Looking back to the American constitutional founding, we see a gap between soaring transformational rhetoric on the one hand and preservation of privilege and slavery on the other. Emphasizing what the legal historian Michael Klarman has called a “coup” by the framers against more broadly inclusive democratic institutions, this chapter argues that the final set of compromises extracted by the forces of preservation amounted to a “pact with the devil”. The first period of implementation witnessed a set of brutal battles over interpretation of the constitutional text, especially about issues of state sovereignty and the scope of national power, that played out in the courts and the political sphere. The preservation of the new country was hardly to be taken for granted, and this meant that those with transformationist aspirations had to of necessity temper their demands.
- Type
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- Information
- From Parchment to PracticeImplementing New Constitutions, pp. 31 - 52Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020