Article contents
Eternity clauses in post-conflict and post-authoritarian constitution-making: Promise and limits
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2017
Abstract:
The literature on entrenchment as a means to achieve constitutional endurance has grown in recent years, as has the scholarship on unamendable provisions as a mechanism intended to safeguard the constitutional project. However, little attention has been paid to the promise and limits of eternity clauses in transitional settings. Their appeal in this context is great. In an effort to safeguard hard-fought agreements, drafters often declare unamendable what they consider the fundamentals to the political deal: the number of presidential term limits, the commitment to human rights and to democracy, the form of the state (whether republican or monarchical), the territorial integrity of the state, the territorial division of power, secularism or the official religion. This article explores the distinctive role and problems posed by eternity clauses in transitional constitution-building, as guarantees of the pre-constitutional political settlement in such fragile periods. The article also compares unamendability to other techniques of constitution-making in uncertain times, such as sunset clauses, deferring hard choices and other forms of constitutional incrementalism.
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- Special Issue: Constitution-making and political settlements in times of transition
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017
References
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139 Zulueta-Fülscher (n 131) 18.
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143 Schwartzberg (n 58) 12.
144 Widner (n 12) 1534.
145 Art 147 of the Draft Constitution of the Republic of Tunisia, 14 December 2012.
146 Elkins, Ginsburg and Melton (n 142) 13.
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150 Ibid 149.
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154 Ibid 8–9.
155 V Jackson, ICON-Society Annual Conference, New York, 1 July 2015.
156 J Di John and J Putzel, ‘Political Settlements’, Issues Paper, (Governance and Social Development Resource Centre, University of Birmingham, June 2009) 4, available at <http://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/103642.pdf>.
157 Volpi and Stein (n 38) 280, 289.
158 McCormick-Cavanagh, C, ‘Tunisia MPs Resign to Stop Creation of “Dynastic Legacy” by Country’s President’, The Middle East Eye, 9 November 2015, available at: <http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/tunisia-mp-says-mass-resignations-aimed-stopping-dynastic-legacy-countrys-president-2059371519/>>Google Scholar.
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