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Russia’s Non-Transformative Constitutional Founding
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 November 2019
Abstract
The founding of Russia’s 1993 Constitution undermined its transformative potential – The use of pre-existing Soviet legality during Russia’s 1993 founding period encouraged President Yeltsin to push through a constitution that would ensure presidential dominance over the legislative branch – This presidential centralism has hindered the realisation of the transformative potential of the other parts of the constitution – Any future turn to transformative constitutionalism in Russia will require weakening the power of the Russian presidency – Transformative constitutionalism depends as much on the actual process of constitutional foundation as the text of the constitution
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Footnotes
Associate Professor, Melbourne Law School (Melbourne, Australia); email: [email protected].
Professor of Constitutional Law & Head of the Constitutional Law Faculty, National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow, Russia); email: [email protected].
References
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