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Constitutionalization of Happiness: A Global and Comparative Inquiry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2023

Trevor T. W. Wan*
Affiliation:
LL.M. Candidate, Harvard Law School
*
Corresponding author: [email protected]

Abstract

Happiness and well-being are now explicitly enshrined in a myriad of national constitutions. As of 2022, the terms “happiness” and “well-being” form part of the constitutional lexicon of more than 20 and 110 states respectively. These “happiness provisions” epitomize the phenomenon of the “constitutionalization of happiness,” which denotes the process of elevating happiness to the constitutional echelon, thereby bearing discernible legal and political implications. An audit of all happiness provisions reveals that they boil down to three categories—happiness as a national objective, happiness as a policy paradigm, and the pursuit of happiness as a human right. The meaning and jurisprudential landscape of happiness provisions within a specific constitutional framework is molded by, on top of the semantic and structural configuration, a dynamic interplay among three factors, which include the indigenous and socio-cultural conception of happiness of that state, interpretations put forward by judges and other constitutional actors, and transnational influences such as the migration of constitutional ideas and jurisprudence. This article draws upon an extensive array of case studies, covering among others Bhutan, Bolivia, Ecuador, Japan, Korea, and Nigeria, to illustrate the breadth and diversity that enliven the universe of happiness provisions.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
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© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the German Law Journal

A. Introduction

Happiness, affirmed by the United Nations General Assembly as the “universal goal and aspiration in the lives of human beings around the world,”Footnote 1 has wielded profound influence over the trajectory of law and politics throughout human history.Footnote 2 The proposition that happiness is the end goal of political life stretches at least back to Aristotle, who notably declared that happiness, or eudaimonia, stood as the ultimate goal of all human endeavors.Footnote 3 Seeds of this idea had since been sown across the globe, reaching a “high watermark in the eighteenth century”Footnote 4 during which a number of seminal documents encapsulating this very idea came into being. The United States Declaration of Independence of 1776 famously proclaimed that all equal men “are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” The Bhutanese Legal Code of 1729 likewise announced that “if the government cannot create happiness (dekidk) for its people, there is no purpose for the government to exist.”Footnote 5

The recent decades have overseen a mounting enthusiasm for the notion that happiness can function as a cornerstone for formulating public policies, rekindling interest in the intricate interplay between happiness, law, and politics.Footnote 6 One manifestation of such interplay is the fact that happiness has secured the pride of place in a number of codified constitutions, “an essential symbol of the modern state.”Footnote 7 The increasing prominence of happiness, and its conceptual relatives such as well-being, in constitutional texts worldwide underscores the phenomenon of the “constitutionalization of happiness,” which denotes the process of elevating happiness to the constitutional echelon, thereby bearing discernible legal and political implications. As of 2022, the terms “happiness” and “well-being” form part of the constitutional lexicon of more than 20 and 110 states respectively. Article 5 of the Turkish Constitution of 1982 ordains that “[t]he fundamental aims and duties of the State are to safeguard the independence and integrity of the Turkish Nation, the indivisibility of the country, the Republic and democracy, to ensure the welfare, peace, and happiness of the individual and society.”Footnote 8 Article 10 of the Constitution of South Korea of 1987, on the other hand, declares that “[a]ll citizens shall be assured of human worth and dignity and have the right to pursue happiness.”Footnote 9

The trend of constitutionalization notwithstanding, the inherent vagueness that undergirds the concept of happiness, contingent upon the cognitive, cultural and social milieu of diverse peoples and societies, raises unresolved questions as to what the constitutional meaning of happiness is or ought to be in different settings. This article takes on this challenge by mapping and topologizing the multifarious semantic, cultural and jurisprudential meanings that became attached to constitutionalized happiness and well-being. It does so through analyzing all constitutional provisions that contain the terms happiness and well-being in force as of 2022, collectively referred to as the “happiness provisions.” An audit of all happiness provisions reveals that they boil down to three categories—happiness as a national objective, happiness as a policy paradigm, and the pursuit of happiness as a human right. The meaning and jurisprudential landscape of happiness provisions within a specific constitutional framework is molded by, on top of the provisions’ semantic and structural configuration, a dynamic interplay among three factors which include the indigenous and socio-cultural conception of happiness of that state, interpretations put forward by judges and other constitutional actors, and transnational influences such as the migration of constitutional ideas and jurisprudence. These factors do not operate in a vacuum or a mutually exclusive manner. Indeed, they often collide with or complement one another, thereby furnishing a distinct constitutional meaning of happiness within particular settings. There is no monolithic constitutionalized happiness across time and space.

This study situates itself within the burgeoning scholarship in comparative constitutional law which subjects certain types of provisions or concepts to both small-n and large-n comparative scrutiny. For example, Shulztiner and Carmi unpacked the meanings and functions of dignity in diverse constitutional contexts;Footnote 10 Ginsburg documented the adoption of balanced budget provisions in constitutions and their influences;Footnote 11 Bisarya undertook an evaluation of how “transitional provisions” have fared;Footnote 12 and Roznai anatomized the so-called eternity or unamendable clauses that have spread globally.Footnote 13 This study adds its voice to this chorus of scholarship by utilizing happiness provisions as the focal point of analysis.

This article is organized as follows. Section B maps the theoretical contours of “constitutionalization of happiness.” It elaborates on the three categories of happiness provisions and analyzes how the three factors identified above shape the meaning and jurisprudential landscape of happiness provisions in diverse contexts. Section C draws on an extensive array of examples and considers how happiness is fashioned as a national objective in constitutions. Section D investigates how happiness serves as an underpinning policy cornerstone in the larger constitutional scheme, focusing on the examples of Bhutan, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Section E examines the right to pursuit of happiness and tracks its judicialization and interpretation by courts and other actors over time, zooming into the cases of Japan and Korea. Section F concludes.

B. Constitutions, Happiness, and the Constitutionalization of Happiness

I. The Marriage between Constitutions and Happiness

Happiness has been extolled by some, including Aristotle, as the end goal of political life. According to James Wilson, one of the founding fathers of the United States of America, the ends of political authority was “to ensure and to increase the happiness of the governed above what they could enjoy in an independent and unconnected state of nature” for “the happiness of the society is the first law of every government.”Footnote 14 Thomas Paine, whose work held immense sway among American revolutionaries, captured the same idea in the following words: “[w]hatever the form or Constitution of Government may be, it ought to have no other object than the general happiness.”Footnote 15 In continental Europe, Christian Wolff wrote that a state must, “through active intervention . . . secure for its subjects the conditions for such thriving and thus to promote happiness.”Footnote 16 The state which Wolff envisioned was “an interventionist tutelary regime, an enlightened absolutism whose objective is to guarantee material and moral advance.”Footnote 17 Likewise, Jeremy Bentham famously posited that the aim of law and government is to secure the greatest amount of happiness for the greatest number of people.Footnote 18

These time-honored statements find ample modern resonance, especially after World War II. The preamble of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man adopted in 1948, otherwise known as the Bogota Declaration, settled that “[the American people’s] national constitutions recognize that juridical and political institutions, which regulate life in human society, have as their principal aim the protection of the essential rights of man and the creation of circumstances that will permit him to achieve spiritual and material progress and attain happiness.”Footnote 19 More recently, as rehearsed in the introduction, the United Nations General Assembly declared happiness to be the universal goal of human lives in 2012.

Modern written constitutions are the “foundational instruments [that] publicly articulate a polity’s political identity and normative architecture, its values and structural distribution of power.”Footnote 20 They are the “ubiquitous” hallmarks of modern nation-states.Footnote 21 In particular for fundamental values, principles and ideals, many of which are often not directly justiciable in courts of law, their inclusion usually reflects a conscious choice to entrench and preserve them so as to withstand the passage of time. Elevating happiness to a position of prominence in codified constitutions reinforces its capacity to exert an enduring influence.

Happiness made its debut on the constitutional plane in 1791. Article VII of the Constitution of 3 May 1791 of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth announced that “no government, be it the most perfect, can stand without strong executive authority. The happiness of peoples depends upon just laws, the effect of the laws—upon their execution.”Footnote 22 Two years later, the French Constitution of 24 June 1793 declared in Article 1 that “the aim of the society is general happiness (Le but de la société est le bonheur commun).”Footnote 23 These documents were adopted after the founding fathers of modern America opted against incorporating the right to pursuit of happiness, present in the Declaration of Independence, into the United States Constitution of 1789. One of the first post-war constitutions that features a happiness provision is the Constitution of Japan of 1947. Article 13 states that “[a]ll of the people shall be respected as individuals. Their right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness shall, to the extent that it does not interfere with the public welfare, be the supreme consideration in legislation and in other governmental affairs.”Footnote 24

The explicit enshrinement of happiness in modern constitutions, nonetheless, gives rise to a number of lingering questions. What functions does happiness play in modern constitutions? What does happiness mean in a particular constitutional context? Does incorporating happiness into a constitution increase the level of happiness of the citizens as an empirical matter? Why do drafters incorporate happiness into constitutions in the first place? This article is primarily concerned with the first two questions, and also touches slightly on the fourth question, analyzed using the conceptual frame of “constitutionalization of happiness,” to which I now turn.

II. The Constitutionalization of Happiness

As of 2022, the terms “happiness” and “well-being” feature in the constitutional lexicon of more than 20 and 110 states respectively. For example, under the Constitution of Angola of 2010, the state is enjoined to “promote the well-being, social solidarity and improved quality of life for the people of Angola, specifically amongst the most deprived groups of the population.”Footnote 25 The preamble to the Namibian Constitution of 1990 affirms that the “right of the individual to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” are the “inalienable rights of all members of the human family [that] is indispensable for freedom, justice and peace.”Footnote 26

The proliferation of happiness provisions mirrors and manifests the confluence of two contemporary trends in law and politics—the revived emphasis on happiness as a policy objective, and the globalization of the practice of adopting a written constitution.Footnote 27 These happiness provisions epitomize the phenomenon of the “constitutionalization of happiness,” which denotes the process of elevating happiness to the constitutional echelon, thereby bearing discernible legal and political implications. This phenomenon is animated by the three categories of or functions that happiness provisions play, and highlights that, despite its inherent conceptual vagueness, happiness can be a consequential legal concept. The aim of this article is to unpack these functional and semantic nuances and, moving beyond the “philosophical” and “psychological” accounts of happiness,Footnote 28 put forward a “constitutional” account of happiness.

All constitutional provisions in force as of 2022 that contain either or both of the terms “happiness” and “well-being” are collated for the purpose of this study.Footnote 29 As a matter of empirical strategy, provisions that contain the term “well-being” are also included for two reasons. First, happiness is often used interchangeably with well-being in common parlance, despite objections and arguments to the contrary.Footnote 30 Second, this strategy accommodates variations in translation, for it is not always the case that ostensibly similar ideas and concepts from different cultures can be precisely translated into or captured by the English term “happiness.” One further point on the scope of this article should be noted. The happiness provisions collated and analyzed pertain only to happiness of the people or citizens of the state. Constitutions sometimes purport to protect the well-being of non-human subjects, such as the economy, but provisions to that effect are excluded from the purview of this study.

An audit of all happiness provisions reveals that they boil down to three categories—happiness as a national objective, happiness as a policy paradigm, and the pursuit of happiness as a human right. Of course, the sectional assignment, language, as well as semantic and structural configuration of a happiness provision are often determinative of its category. For example, the Bulgarian Constitution of 1991 announces, in the section enumerating fundamental principles, that “[t]he foreign policy of the Republic of Bulgaria shall have as its highest objective the national security and independence of the country, the well-being and the fundamental rights and freedoms of the Bulgarian citizens, and the promotion of a just international order.”Footnote 31 This unequivocally establishes that the promotion of citizens’ well-being is a national objective of Bulgaria, at least in the context of foreign policy. These three categories do not occupy separate watertight compartments. Happiness provisions frequently fulfill more than one function, traversing the boundaries of these fluid categories.

The meaning and jurisprudential landscape of happiness provisions within one specific constitutional framework is furthermore molded by, on top of the semantic and structural configuration, a dynamic interplay among three factors, which include the indigenous and socio-cultural conception of happiness of that state, interpretations put forward by judges and other constitutional actors, and transnational influences such as the migration of constitutional ideas and jurisprudence. These factors do not operate in a vacuum or a mutually exclusive manner. Indeed, they often collide with or complement one another, thereby furnishing a distinct constitutional meaning of happiness within particular settings. These factors will now be examined in turn.

First, the meaning of happiness within a particular constitutional context is heavily influenced by the indigenous or socio-cultural conception of that state and society. Just as the “particular manifestations and descriptions of happiness are culturally informed and contextualized,”Footnote 32 the constitutional meaning of happiness bespeaks the polity’s unique socio-cultural and historical character so long as the text does not prescribe a meaning that is fundamentally at odds.

Second, judges and other constitutional actors are often enlisted in the enterprise of interpreting and fleshing out the content of happiness provisions. Constitutional language is often general and vague.Footnote 33 Happiness provisions provide no exception, for intrinsic ambiguity renders difficult any attempt to concretize the concept. Such ambiguity opens up broad discursive space, effectively extending an invitation to interpreters to partake in the exercise of filling the definitional void. Governmental or executive institutions do so through policy-making or executive interpretation, the legislature through parliamentary law-making, judges through judicial decision-making, and scholars through academic debates. Viewed thus, happiness provisions are just one branch of the bigger ‘living tree’, the interpretation of which is capable of evolution over time.

Certainly, the prospect of disagreements among interpreters remains well and alive. The resolution of such interpretive differences is entwined with and contingent upon the power dynamics and aptitudes of the institutions involved,Footnote 34 a realm of inquiry beyond the scope of this article. Suffice to note that such interpretive contestations themselves constitute an important impetus propelling the expansion of the discursive space, and ultimately contributing to a better and more nuanced understanding of the constitutional meaning of happiness.

Third, transnational and foreign influences, including the migration of constitutional ideas and jurisprudence, shape how happiness is understood within a domestic constitutional setting. There is now a sophisticated body of literature documenting how constitutional ideas, designs, and provisions “migrate” from one jurisdiction to another through multiple mechanisms,Footnote 35 discrediting the previously held notion of a monolithic “We the People” wielding the pouvoir constituant.Footnote 36 These mechanisms encompass the conscious copying of constitutional text and language, the imposition of constitutional arrangements from one state onto another, and the judicial borrowing of and citation to foreign constitutional ideas and jurisprudence.Footnote 37 Through these avenues, the constitutional meaning of happiness breaches state and jurisdictional boundaries, and intertwines with pre-existing indigenous and socio-cultural conceptions of happiness.

These three factors do not operate in a mutually exclusive manner or in isolation. Indeed, it is more often than not the case that multiple factors are concurrently at play. In these instances, these factors may either complement or contradict one another. These forces are likewise not static either, allowing for evolution or alteration of the meaning of constitutionalized happiness across time and space.

C. Happiness as a Constitutionally-Enshrined National Objective

National objectives comprise an important part of modern constitutions. They are “central to a comprehensive understanding of the structure of constitutions, their hopes, their contingencies, and what inspired their designs.”Footnote 38 They constitute a framework that steers the interpretation and execution of the operative provisions, and offer guidance to the interpreters as to the intent of the drafters.Footnote 39 The incorporation of national objective provisions into modern constitutions is, however, a relatively recent phenomenon. As Leal underscored, it is often “associated with developing countries whose constitutions incorporate a vast catalogue of rights and aim to orientate transitions from authoritarian to more democratic regimes.”Footnote 40

Promoting the happiness of citizens stands as one salient objective that has secured a pride of place in modern constitutions. This goal sometimes finds sanctuary in the preamble, the “locus par excellence to detect desired state of affairs.”Footnote 41 The preamble to the Eswatini Constitution of 2005 announces that “as a nation we desire to march forward progressively under our own constitution guaranteeing peace, order and good government, and the happiness and welfare of all our people.”Footnote 42 The preamble of the Thai Constitution of 2017 calls upon all Thai people to “unite in observing, protecting and upholding the Constitution . . . and to bring about happiness, prosperity and dignity to His Majesty’s subjects throughout the Kingdom.”Footnote 43 The preamble of the Constitution of Bhutan of 2008 enjoins the Bhutanese people to “strengthen the sovereignty of Bhutan, to secure the blessings of liberty, to ensure justice and tranquility and to enhance the unity, happiness and well-being of the people for all time.”Footnote 44 Under the Kenyan Constitution of 2010, the people of Kenya are committed to “nurturing and protecting the well-being of the individual, the family, communities and the nation.”Footnote 45 The preamble to the Armenian Constitution of 1995 affirms the “aim of ensuring the freedom, general well-being, and civic solidarity of the generations.”Footnote 46

Happiness provisions may also be housed within a cluster of “national objectives provisions” or “mission statement provisions”Footnote 47 in the operative sections, in particular the section enumerating the fundamental or general principles of the state. When situated within the section on fundamental principles, the happiness provisions accentuate their own “centrality relative to other important, yet possibly competing, ideals.”Footnote 48 The rest of the text is to be understood and interpreted in the light of this national objective. Article 5 of the Turkish Constitution of 1982 stipulates that “[t]he fundamental aims and duties of the State are to safeguard the independence and integrity of the Turkish Nation, the indivisibility of the country, the Republic and democracy, to ensure the welfare, peace, and happiness of the individual and society.”Footnote 49 Article 16 of the Azerbaijani Constitution of 1995 obligates the Republic to “[ensure] the improvement of the well-being of the people and every citizen, their social protection and normal living standard.”Footnote 50 The Honduran Constitution of 1982 announces in Article 1 that the fundamental aim of the state is “to ensure its inhabitants the enjoyment of justice, liberty, culture, and social and economic well-being.”Footnote 51

At times, constitutions mandate a specific domain of state activity be conducted in a manner that advances the happiness of the people. These domains encompass foreign policy, as seen in the case of Bulgaria, decentralization in the case of Uruguay, economic and social policies in the case of Guinea-Bissau, and religious policies in the case of Timor-Leste. Article 50 of the Uruguayan Constitution of 1966 states that “the State shall initiate policies of decentralization, in such a way as to promote regional development and the general well-being.”Footnote 52 Article 11 of the Constitution of Guinea-Bissau of 1984 provides that “[t]he economic and social organization of Guinea-Bissau has as objective the continuous promotion of its people’s well-being and the elimination of all forms of subjection of human beings to degrading interests, for the benefit of individuals, groups or classes.”Footnote 53 The Timor-Leste Constitution of 2002 charges the state to prompt “cooperation with the different religious denominations that contribute to the well-being of the people of East Timor.”Footnote 54

Several African constitutions obligate the government to manage the economy in a way that is conducive to promoting the happiness of the people. In strikingly similar phraseology, indicative of transnational influences and migration of constitutional provisions, both the Eswatini Constitution of 2005 and Ghanian Constitution of 1992 direct the state to:

. . . take all necessary action to ensure that the national economy is managed in such a manner as to maximize the rate of economic development and to secure the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every person . . . and to provide adequate means of livelihood and suitable employment and public assistance to the needy.Footnote 55

In the same vein, Section 16(1)(b) of the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 calls upon the state to “control the national economy in such manner as to secure the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity.”Footnote 56 Despite its semblance to a non-justiciable “programmatic exhortation to the elected branches,”Footnote 57 the Nigerian courts have invested the provision with a certain degree of legal bite. In Bamidele Aturu v. Minister of Petroleum Resources, the policy to deregulate the downstream sector of the Nigerian oil industry and the government’s refusal to fix the prices for petroleum products were found to be illegal and unconstitutional by the Federal High Court of Nigeria. The Court ruled that the policy violated Section 16(1)(b) and the relevant provisions of the Petroleum Act and Price Control Act, a combined reading of which imposed a duty to regulate and fix the prices of petroleum products.Footnote 58 This decision, encouraging though it may be, ought not be mistranslated as a broad judicial endorsement of the justiciability of provisions of this kind. That is because, under the Federal High Court’s decision, Section 16(1)(b) was only “made justiciable via legislation,” namely the Petroleum Act and Price Control Act.Footnote 59

Other constitutions ordain the promotion of the well-being of specific groups of people. Article 76 of the Icelandic Constitution of 1944 states that “[f]or children, the law shall guarantee the protection and care which is necessary for their well-being.”Footnote 60 Article 60(3) of the Vietnamese Constitution of 1992 stipulates that “[t]he State and society shall provide favorable environment for the construction of the Vietnamese family which is well off, progressive, and happy; create the Vietnamese people who are healthy, cultural, profoundly patriotic, solidary, independent, and responsible.”Footnote 61 Article 34 of the Nicaraguan Constitution of 1987 obligates the state to “protect crime victims” who “have a right to the protection of their safety, physical and psychological well-being, dignity and private life in conformity with the law.”Footnote 62 Section 13 of article II of the Constitution of the Philippines of 1987 provides that “[t]he State recognizes the vital role of the youth in nation-building and shall promote and protect their physical, moral, spiritual, intellectual, and social well-being.”Footnote 63 Article 127 of the Panama Constitution of 1972 guarantees to “indigenous communities the reservation of necessary lands an collective ownership thereof, to ensure their economic and social well-being.”Footnote 64

Certain constitutions identify the foundations for happiness and well-being, alluding to subjects such as agriculture, health, environmental quality, and the entitlement to land. Article 4 of the Mexican Constitution of 1917 identifies “the right to a healthy environment” as essential for any person’s “own development and well-being.”Footnote 65 Article 366 of the Colombian Constitution of 1991 ordains that “[t]he general well-being and improvement of the population’s quality of life are social purposes of the State” and the “objective of their activity [is] . . . to address the unfulfilled public health, educational, environmental, and drinking water needs of those affected.”Footnote 66 Article 57 of the Costa Rican Constitution of 1949 guarantees the workers’ right “to a minimum salary, fixed periodically, for a normal working day, that procures them well-being and dignified existence.”Footnote 67 Article 247 of the Haitian Constitution of 1987 identifies “[a]griculture, which is the main source of the Nation’s wealth” as “a guarantee of the well-being of the people and the socio-economic progress of the Nation.”Footnote 68 Article 109 of the Constitution of Mozambique of 2004 provides that “[a]s a universal means for the creation of wealth and of social well-being, the use and enjoyment of land shall be the right of all the Mozambican people.”Footnote 69

One common pillar of happiness resides within the realm of work and labor, under which the meaningful involvement in and fulfillment derived from work play a pivotal role in enhancing overall well-being. Article 21 of the Guyana Constitution of 1980 considers that “[t]he source of the growth of social wealth and of the well-being of the people, and of each individual, is the labour of the people.”Footnote 70 Article 35 of the Azerbaijani Constitution identifies that “[w]ork is the basis of individual and social well-being.”Footnote 71 Article 25 of the Tanzanian Constitution of 1977 goes even further and expresses that “[w]ork alone creates the material wealth in society, and is the source of the well-being of the people and the measure of human dignity.”Footnote 72

Despite having ventured into the foundations of happiness, many happiness provisions still fall short of capably articulating an explicit constitutional meaning for the two remain conceptually distinct. The murkiness may furthermore be attributed to the fact that some drafters or interpreters are simply not bothered, for they consider happiness provisions as mere “window dressing”Footnote 73 vacuous rhetoric the single function of which is to coat a veneer of legitimacy on the state without any intended substantive or legal impact.

One counter-tendency surrounding the use of happiness as a national objective warrants attention. The obligation to promote happiness may be used to rationalize constraints on human rights and freedoms that are, at least presumptively, simultaneously cruical for happiness. The Cuban Constitution of 2019 contains a general limitation clause under which human rights may be limited for the purpose of protecting the well-being of others. Article 45 states that “[t]he exercise of these rights of the people” can be “limited by the rights of others, collective security, general well-being, respect for public order, the Constitution, and the laws.”Footnote 74 Similarly, Article 31 of the Provisional Constitution of Somalia of 2012 requires, without laying down any criteria or parameter, the state to “promote the positive traditions and cultural practices of the Somali people” and “eliminate from the community customs and emerging practices which negatively impact the unity, civilization and well-being of society.”Footnote 75 Under such schematic, imposing restrictions on the rights and freedoms under the pretext of advancing general well-being may well prove antithetical to the happiness of other individuals.

D. Happiness as a Constitutional Policy Paradigm

Section C traced how happiness is enshrined in modern constitutions as a national objective. Nevertheless, the realization of this objective, by whatever rubric, is self-evidently unlikely to be within reach at least in the short term, even if we assume that the state is willing to see through the mission impossible. The reality, perhaps, is more likely that the drafters and implementers who pen and execute constitutions simply do not have a smidgen of true grit to roll up their sleeves and make those goals happen, relegating them to mere “façades” that “combine fantasy with farce.”Footnote 76

Some constitutions take an additional stride. Instead of confining happiness to merely a national objective, the framers embed it pervasively within the operative articles, which in turn translate the abstract concept into detailed and perhaps justiciable policy directives. These operative articles, spanning diverse domains such as the economy, social welfare, education, health, land, environment, cultural heritage, science, and labor, combine to form a complex policy web with happiness inhabiting the core. This section delves into three case studies, wherein a pre-existing substantive conception of happiness structures and engulfs the constitutionally embedded policy paradigm operationalized by an array of provisions.  These case studies include the Bhutanese Constitution drafted in the spirit of the theory of Gross National Happiness, and the Ecuadorian and Bolivian Constitutions which are heavily influenced by the Andean philosophy of buen vivir.

I. Bhutan: Gross National Happiness

Bhutan, a Buddhist kingdom nestled in the Himalayas, has garnered worldwide recognition for its unique developmental paradigm centered on the idea of Gross National Happiness (GNH). GNH was first conceived by the fourth King of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, back in 1972,Footnote 77 when he famously declared that “Gross National Happiness is more important than Gross Domestic Product.”Footnote 78 Over the years, GNH has blossomed into a rich and vibrant philosophy undergirded by a quintet of core elements. They include holisticness, which denotes the recognition of all aspects of the people’s needs including spiritual, material, physical, and social; balance, which emphasizes a balanced progress between the different features of GNH; collectiveness, which recognizes happiness as an all-encompassing collective phenomenon; sustainability, which calls for pursuit of the well-being of both the current and future generations; and equitableness, which focuses on realizing a reasonable and equitable level of well-being.Footnote 79 These five core elements are in turn operationalized by four pillars, namely sustainable and equitable socio-economic development, environmental conservation, preservation and promotion of culture, and good governance. Bringing down to policymaking praxis, these four pillars are further unfolded into a kaleidoscope of nine domains which “map more specifically the key areas of GNH.”Footnote 80 They include “psychological wellbeing, health, education, cultural diversity and resilience, time use, good governance, community vitality, living standard, and ecological diversity, and resilience.”Footnote 81

The ethos of happiness in GNH diverges sharply from the purely subjective and hedonistic conception of well-being. As Jigmi Y. Thinley, the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Bhutan, said:

We have now clearly distinguished the ‘happiness’ . . . in GNH from the fleeting, pleasurable ‘feel good’ moods so often associated with that term. We know that true abiding happiness cannot exist while others suffer, and comes only from serving others, living in harmony with nature, and realizing our innate wisdom and the true and brilliant nature of our own minds.Footnote 82

GNH finds its genesis in Buddhist culture. The former Prime Minister further explained:

A Buddhist equivalent of a ‘Social Contract’ declared in Bhutan in 1675 said that happiness of sentient beings and teachings of the Buddha were mutually dependent . . . much about what we may call Buddhist science of mind is about managing feelings and emotions, that invisible mental world which destroys all around us if we cannot manage. Thus, a great deal of cultural knowledge and education in traditional society was meant to train people’s psychology towards happiness of all.Footnote 83

According to the incumbent King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck:

[GNH] signifies simply—Development with Values—where we strive for the benefits of economic growth and modernization while ensuring that in our drive for economic progress we do not forget to nurture that which makes us united, harmonious, and secure as Bhutanese. Whether it is our strong community structure or our culture and heritage, our traditional respect for the environment or the desire for a peaceful coexistence with other nations, the duty of the Bhutanese State is to ensure that these invaluable elements contributing to the happiness and well-being of our people are protected and strengthened. Our government must be human. Thus, for Bhutan, [GNH] is the bridge between the fundamental values of Kindness, Equality, and Humanity and the necessary pursuit of economic growth.Footnote 84

After four decades of steady evolution in theory and practice, GNH was formally incorporated into the new Constitution of 2008 as a guiding policy for the nation and attained the zenith of significance. Article 9(2) proclaimed that “[t]he State shall strive to promote those conditions that will enable the pursuit of Gross National Happiness.”Footnote 85 Article 20(1) commits the Royal Government to “protect and strengthen the sovereignty of the Kingdom, provide good governance, and ensure peace, security, well-being and happiness of the people.”Footnote 86

Having affirmed the role of GNH as the guiding national policy, the Bhutanese Constitution then proceeds to systematically translate the four pillars of GNH into actionable directives across a broad spectrum of policy domains. For culture, Article 4(1) charges the state to “preserve, protect and promote the cultural heritage of the country, including monuments, places and objects of artistic or historic interest, Dzongs, Lhakhangs, Goendeys, Ten-sum, Nyes, language, literature, music, visual arts and religion to enrich society and the cultural life of the citizens.”Footnote 87 As for environmental sustainability, Article 5(1) regards every Bhutanese as “a trustee of the Kingdom’s natural resources and environment for the benefit of the present and future generations,” and stipulates that every citizen must “contribute to the protection of the natural environment.”Footnote 88 Article 5(3) follows up by requiring the Royal Government to ensure “a minimum of sixty percent of Bhutan’s total land shall be maintained under forest cover for all time.”Footnote 89 The inclusion of a quantitative rather than qualitative standard of forest protection has been hailed as a “remarkable development within the field of global environmental constitutionalism.” Footnote 90 In the domain of equitable economic development, Article 5(2) commands the Royal Government to “secure ecologically balanced sustainable development while promoting justifiable economic and social development.”Footnote 91 Finally, in the sphere of good governance, Article 9(3) obligates the state to “create a civil society free of oppression, discrimination and violence, based on the rule of law, protection of human rights and dignity, and to ensure the fundamental rights and freedoms of the people.”Footnote 92

As chronicled by Givel, in the wake of the 2008 Constitution, the National Assembly of Bhutan embarked upon a legislative odyssey, enacting a plethora of legislation that delineate in even more concrete terms GNH-informed policy directives in specific areas of concern.Footnote 93 Consider healthcare legislation. Under the Tobacco Control Act of 2010, it is declared that “the physical health and wellbeing of the people of Bhutan . . . are important elements of the development principle of Gross National Happiness.”Footnote 94 The University of Medical Sciences Act of 2012 states that “the people must have access to the high quality, wholesome health care services through holistic, patient centred, evidence-based and culturally appropriate approaches in harmony with the development paradigm of Gross National Happiness.”Footnote 95 Consider also legislation on environmental protection. The preamble to the Water Act of 2011 puts beyond doubt its intention “to protect the environment and human health through integrated water resources management in pursuit of Gross National Happiness and the age-old tradition of living in harmony with nature.”Footnote 96

Bhutan offers a paradigmatic example in which a pre-existing socio-cultural conception of happiness ascended to constitutional stature, informing and underpinning the language and design of the rest of the text. At the same time, the expansive nature of GNH as a developmental philosophy provides the foundation for and catalyzes its evolution and adaptation under the tutelage of constitution-makers who translate overarching precepts into actionable constitutional directives. This effort extends to parliamentarians who, in turn, concretize these constitutional directives through statutory enactments across diverse policy domains. In this process, both constitution-makers and parliamentarians are endowed with the opportunity to proffer their own interpretations of GNH, beyond its crude contours.

As a final note, it is worth pointing out that GNH has by-and-large remained untouched by the winds of transnational influence. Vigilant against potential engulfment by its formidable neighbors, Bhutan has strategically embraced a policy characterized by “[i]solation, caution toward outsiders, and cultivation of national identity.”Footnote 97 This approach enabled Bhutan to not only safeguard the original essence and purity of GNH, but also position itself as a net exporter of cultural influence to the world through GNH, now widely celebrated across the globe.

II. Ecuador and Bolivia: Buen Vivir

The term buen vivir, when translated from Spanish, approximately conveys the notion of “living well” or “good living.”Footnote 98 It is a “traditional philosophy of indigenous native American tribes of the Amazon and Andean Highland areas.”Footnote 99 In recent decades, this social philosophy has undergone rapid resurgence, stemming from the “widespread disenchantment”Footnote 100 with neoliberal reforms. The renewed interest has catalyzed buen vivir’s metamorphosis into a more expansive political and developmental paradigm.Footnote 101 At its core, buen vivir envisions a “balanced relationship between people and their community and natural surroundings” and calls for the “[enjoyment of] human rights responsibly while respecting common goods within the context of a harmonious coexistence.”Footnote 102 Scholars have, for the most part, coalesced around the consensus that the essential core of buen vivir encapsulates harmony with nature, respect for values and principles of the indigenous peoples, satisfaction of basic needs, democratic governance, and the state’s responsibility to ensure social justice and equality.Footnote 103

In a trajectory parallel to that of GNH, buen vivir achieved constitutional rank in the two Latin American nations of Ecuador and Bolivia, the populations of which continue to profess fidelity to their cultural traditions,Footnote 104 around a similar time. Constitutionalization momentum was picked up against the backdrop of consecutive elections that brought left-wing politicians to power. This enabled the “expression of indigenous knowledge and traditions that were oppressed, minimized or subordinated over centuries”Footnote 105 via new constitutions adopted in 2008 (Ecuador) and 2009 (Bolivia) respectively. These new constitutions openly flouted the frequently-voiced criticism that the incorporation of buen vivir represented mere rhetoric,Footnote 106 and that the philosophy “falls short of its promise when brought down to political, economic, and social praxis.”Footnote 107

Even though buen vivir has for all practical purposes assumed the role of a “central reference”Footnote 108 in both new constitutions, the two Latin American nations have opted for divergent pathways in achieving that outcome.Footnote 109 In the Bolivian Constitution, buen vivir (or suma qamaña) is defined upfront as an ethical and moral principle. Article 8(I), under the chapter of “Principles, Values and Purposes of the State,” proclaims that “[t]he State adopts and promotes the following as ethical, moral principles of the plural society: ama qhilla, ama llulla, ama suwa [do not be lazy, do not be a liar or a thief], suma qamaña [live well], ñandereko [live harmoniously], teko kavi [good life], ivi maraei [land without evil] and qhapaj ñan [noble path or life].”Footnote 110 Structurally, buen vivir plays a “transversal role”Footnote 111 in the text, governing how the rest of the instrument is to be comprehended, interpreted, implemented and enforced.

In particular, suma qamaña underlies the idea of a “plural economy,” constitutionally recognized as the principal form of economic organization in Bolivia.Footnote 112 Article 306 maps out the gist of this economic model. Article 306(II) envisions that the plural economy comprises “different forms of economic organization based on the principles of complementariness, reciprocity, solidarity, redistribution, equality, legal security, sustainability, equilibrium, justice and transparency,” and obligates the state to place “the highest value on human beings and assures development through the equitable redistribution of economic surplus in the social policies of health, education, culture, and the re-investment in productive economic development.”Footnote 113

In contrast, Ecuador embraces a hybrid of approaches to the constitutionalization of buen vivir, or sumak kawsay. First, in its inaugural appearance in the preamble, buen vivir is presented as a national objective. The preamble calls for the need of “[a] new form of public coexistence, in diversity and in harmony with nature, to achieve the good way of living, the sumak kawsay.” Footnote 114 Second, buen vivir informs and blueprints, as a policy paradigm, an array of operative provisions across diverse governance domains, similar to the role GNH plays in the Bhutanese Constitution of 2008. Article 3(5) declares at the outset that “[p]lanning national development, eliminating poverty, and promoting sustainable development and the equitable redistribution of resources and wealth to enable access to the good way of living”Footnote 115 is one of the state’s “prime duties.”Footnote 116 In contradistinction to the Bolivian Constitution, buen vivir has and is fortified by “its own regime,”Footnote 117 located in Chapter II of Title II “Derechos del Buen vivir” [Rights of Good Way of Living] and Title VII “Régimen del Buen vivir” [Good Way of Living System]. These chapters house a torrent of provisions that are exclusively dedicated to giving buen vivir concrete legal expression across specific policy domains, including science, health, education, and environmental protection etc.Footnote 118

Third, the Ecuadorian Constitution espouses a rights-based approach, under which sumak kawsay is recast into a sophisticated framework of justiciable rights.Footnote 119 The most groundbreaking and widely-recognized buen vivir rights are the “rights of nature (Pacha mama),” enshrined in Chapter VII of Title II. Article 71 states that “[n]ature, or Pacha Mama, where life is reproduced and occurs, has the right to integral respect for its existence and for the maintenance and regeneration of its life cycles, structure, functions and evolutionary processes.”Footnote 120 Article 72 continues: “[n]ature has the right to be restored. This restoration shall be apart from the obligation of the State and natural persons or legal entities to compensate individuals and communities that depend on affected natural systems.”Footnote 121 These provisions have earned acclaim for being pioneering, for they mark the first instance in which a national constitution explicitly recognizes nature as a right-holder.Footnote 122

Although the rights of nature may seem initially as being concerned exclusively with the well-being of the nature and environment rather than the Ecuadorians, the Constitutional Court of Ecuador has taken pains to dismantle this simplistic view and foreground the inherent interdependence between the well-being of nature and well-being of human beings. In a landmark decision delivered in November 2021, the Constitutional Court nullified the issuance of mining permits to Ecuador’s national mining company, Enami EP, for breaching the rights of nature granted to Los Cedros, a protected cloud forest in northwestern Ecuador.Footnote 123 The Constitutional Court rejected the view that the rights of nature were “mere ideals or rhetorical statements.”Footnote 124 Instead, “[t]he rights of nature protect ecosystems and natural processes for their intrinsic value, thus complementing the human right to a healthy and ecologically balanced environment. The rights of nature, like all constitutional rights, are fully justiciable and, consequently, judges are obligated to guarantee them.”Footnote 125

The Constitutional Court then proceeded to flesh out the substratum of the rights of nature. Recognizing that the “intrinsic valorization of nature is difficult to understand from a rigidly anthropocentric perspective, which conceives of human beings as the most valuable species,”Footnote 126 the rights of nature should be conceptualized in the following way: “the human being should not be the only subject of rights, nor the center of environmental protection. On the contrary, while recognizing specificities and differences, a complementarity is proposed between human beings, other species, and natural systems, given that, they integrate common life systems.”Footnote 127

The experience of Ecuador and Bolivia mirrors that of Bhutan. In all three cases, a pre-existing indigenous or socio-cultural conception of happiness or well-being is given constitutional expression. The very breadth and adaptability of these local expressions of well-being functioned as the impetus catalyzing their very enrichment through constitution-making and parliamentary law-making. Transnational influence can also be observed in the aftermath of the adoption of the Bolivian and Ecuadorian Constitutions. While the Bolivian Constitution is silent on the issue of whether the nature itself enjoys rights, the Bolivian National Assembly in 2010 passed the Law of Rights of Mother Earth,Footnote 128 and in 2012 the Framework Law of Mother Earth and Integral Development for Living Well,Footnote 129 recognizing in no uncertain terms the rights of mother earth, which include inter alia the right to life, diversity of life, water, clean air, balance, restoration, and pollution-free living.

E. The Constitutional Right to Pursuit of Happiness

The right to pursuit of happiness boasts an illustrious lineage, harking back to the United States Declaration of Independence of 1776, in which the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness were declared to be the inalienable rights of men. Despite its eventual exclusion from the United States Constitution, “giving way, in the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause, to a more sober concern for the rights of property,”Footnote 130 the right to pursuit of happiness has not receded into the background. In Loving v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held that “[t]he freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.”Footnote 131 In Meyer v. Nebraska, where a Nebraska statute prohibiting the teaching of foreign language was invalidated, the Supreme Court, through the lens of the pursuit of happiness, defined liberty to mean:

. . . not merely freedom from bodily restraint but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any of the common occupations of life, to acquire useful knowledge, to marry, establish a home and bring up children, to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.Footnote 132

The right to pursuit of happiness found early constitutional expression in the Liberian Constitution of 1847, a document that was heavily influenced by and patterned after the United States Constitution.Footnote 133 Article 1 proclaims that “all men are born equally free and independent, and have certain natural, inherent and unalienable rights; among which, are the rights of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property and of pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness.”Footnote 134

Even though the 1847 Constitution would eventually be suspended and later superseded by the 1986 Constitution, the concept of happiness did not fade into obscurity. Article 1 of the 1986 Constitution announces that “All power is inherent in the people. All free governments are instituted by their authority and for their benefit and they have the right to alter and reform the same when their safety and happiness so require.”Footnote 135 Several constitutions have likewise recited the trinity of the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness, mostly in their preambles, including the Haitian Constitution of 1987,Footnote 136 the Namibian Constitution of 1990,Footnote 137 and Seychellois Constitution of 1993.Footnote 138

Shifting gears, a number of constitutions incorporate the right to pursuit of happiness directly into their operative articles. This raises, almost immediately, issues of justiciability and enforceability. Given the conceptual ambiguity that surrounds happiness, a recurring thread in this article, judges are more than likely to run into substantial difficulties in trying to identify the boundaries, nature, and contours of this right, all of which are essential prerequisites for effective enforcement. Indeed, if one subscribes to a broad understanding of happiness, be it in the hedonistic or eudaimonistic sense of the term, a wide spectrum of situations could easily be construed as violations of the right, ranging from the absence of sufficiently appetizing food to widespread rampant corruption. The adoption of a broad understanding coupled with rigorous enforcement of the right could therefore open a Pandora’s box, prompting litigants to inundate and flood the courts with an assortment of trivial and potentially vexatious complaints. The very possibility of this conjecture materializing may be a strong reason why courts could be discouraged from recognizing the right as justiciable in the first place.

This section examines how the constitutional right to pursuit of happiness has been processed by courts, governmental institutions, and academics. It unravels the nuanced theories on the nature and boundaries of this right crafted by these actors, zeroing in on the constitutions of Japan and Korea, both of which explicitly enshrine a right to pursuit of happiness, and dissects the jurisprudential trajectory in respective context.

I. The Right to Pursuit of Happiness in the Japanese Constitution of 1947

Article 13 of the Japanese Constitution of 1947 provides that:

All of the people shall be respected as individuals. Their right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness shall, to the extent that it does not interfere with the public welfare, be the supreme consideration in legislation and in other governmental affairs.Footnote 139

The genesis of this provision can be succinctly stated. The text was drafted largely under the direction of General Douglas MacArthur and the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP) staff after the end of World War II.Footnote 140 Indeed, American influence over the text and the drafting of the text was simply all-encompassing so much so that one commentator found it “difficult to conceive of any other single action of the Allied Occupation of Japan comparable in external or internal importance to the formulation of the new constitution.”Footnote 141 This sheds light on the recurrent debate on whether the Japanese Constitution is an “imposed constitution.”Footnote 142 The rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, a defining trinity of the United States Declaration of Independence, were written into the Japanese Constitution against such historical backdrop, as a product of pervasive American involvement.Footnote 143

While the right to pursuit of happiness itself is of foreign pedigree, two competing theories have emerged, both vying to illuminate its nature and contours. The first school of thought is the “general right to freedom of action theory,” rooted in German constitutional jurisprudence.Footnote 144 Article 2(1) of the German Basic Law stipulates that “Every person shall have the right to free development of his personality insofar as he does not violate the rights of others or offend against the constitutional order or the moral law.” Article 2(1) should be, as the German Federal Constitutional Court held in the Elfes case, “understood as freedom of action in the broadest sense.”Footnote 145 Borrowing the German line of reasoning, some argue that the protection afforded by the right to pursuit of happiness should encompass almost all human activities, regardless of their value, importance, and essentiality to the development of one’s personality.

The second and prevailing school of thought is the “personal interest theory.” According to Nobuyoshi Ashibe, a towering figure in Japanese constitutional law, the right to pursuit of happiness does not protect all spheres of human activity. Instead, it only safeguards those that are essential and necessary to the development of one’s personality.Footnote 146 This theory presupposes that “people as personal entities [have] character and morality,”Footnote 147 and accordingly only those activities that are deemed valuable to the development of one’s character are worthy of protection. This constitutes an intrinsic limit on the scope of protection available under Article 13.

In a decision delivered in August 2022, the Takamatsu District Court upheld the constitutionality of a piece of Kagawa prefectural law which imposes restrictions on the time that minors are allowed to play online games.Footnote 148 Among the constitutional arguments raised by the claimants is the assertion that the law infringes upon the right to pursue happiness, particularly the derivative right to self-determination. The Court showed no sympathy toward this argument, opining that playing online games was not a pursuit essential to one’s personality and therefore did not warrant protection under Article 13.Footnote 149

The right to pursuit of happiness is frequently invoked as the doctrinal bedrock under which what is termed “new human rights”—rights that are not explicitly enumerated in the Constitution but are deemed worthy of legal protection—are derived.Footnote 150 Within this doctrinal rubric, new human rights proffered thus far include for example the right to a healthy environment, right to privacy, right to sunshine, right to tranquility, right to beach, right to information, right not to smoke, right to health, and right to self-determination.Footnote 151 As far as the derivative right to self-determination is concerned, there are suggestions to the effect that it ought to encompass, further down the line, the rights to decide whether to marry, whether to have children, one’s appearance and outfit, and to refuse medical treatment.Footnote 152

Japanese courts, counting the Supreme Court of Japan (SCJ), have exhibited a noticeable hesitation to imbue the right to pursuit of happiness with strong legal bite. As one commentator said, the courts “largely agree that such right is just a little more than a mere declaration of intent, with no prescriptive value in itself, but only in combination of the rest of the article.”Footnote 153 Likewise, whilst a number of “new human rights” have been posited under Article 13, not all of them have garnered authoritative acknowledgment from the courts, with the right to portrait, viewed as a facet of the right to privacy, standing out as an exception. In the Student Union of Kyoto Prefecture Case dated 24 December 1969, the SCJ was asked to consider the constitutionality of a police officer photographing a citizen during a demonstration. The SCJ ruled, invoking Article 13, that the citizens’ freedom in private life should be protected against the intrusion of state power, including police power. As part and parcel of the freedom in private life, citizens also had the right not to have his or her face or appearance photographed without consent or good reason.Footnote 154 In the Fingerprint Case, the SCJ concluded that the freedom in private life under Article 13 included the freedom not to be compelled to undergo compulsory fingerprinting in the absence of due cause.Footnote 155

Perhaps one of the most contentious Article 13 decisions rendered by the SCJ is the 2015 Surname Case. There, Article 750 of the Japanese Civil Code came under constitutional fire. The provision reads “[a] husband and wife shall adopt the surname of the husband or wife in accordance with that which is decided at the time of marriage.”Footnote 156 Dismissing the challenge, the SCJ held that, whilst “a person’s name should be held to form part of personal rights,” the “freedom from being forced to change one’s surname at the time of marriage cannot be regarded as part of personal rights that are guaranteed as constitutional rights.”Footnote 157 The identical issue was re-litigated before the SCJ again in 2021. The claimants cited to changes in social circumstances, including increased female employment, as evidence in support of their bid to overturn the earlier decision. Despite their strenuous efforts, the SCJ remained unmoved.Footnote 158

Manifest judicial reluctance toward robust enforcement notwithstanding, the right has not been confined entirely to obscurity. Other constitutional actors have proactively engaged with and elicited assistance from the right in separate endeavors. Consider how the right has been marshaled to substantiate the reinterpretation of Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, commonly known as the “pacifist clause.”Footnote 159 Under Article 9, the Japanese people unequivocally “renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation,” and the “threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes” was outlawed conclusively.Footnote 160 The provision has been subject to multiple rounds of reinterpretation by the executive. In one earlier executive interpretation, Article 9 was construed to render permissible for Japan to undertake self-defense measures under specified conditions, including where self-defense measures are “inevitable for dealing with imminent unlawful situations where the people’s right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is fundamentally overturned due to an armed attack by a foreign country.”Footnote 161 A 2014 executive decision stretched the above interpretation further in order to broaden the range of circumstances under which Japan may lawfully resort to the use of force, once again invoking the right to pursuit of happiness. According to the decision, self-defense measures can be taken in the event of an attack on a foreign country in a close relationship with Japan which poses similarly clear danger to the Japanese peoples’ right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.Footnote 162 This decision paved way for the eventual passage of the Peace and Security Legislation authorizing the Japanese Self-Defence Force to engage in overseas collective self-defense in 2015.Footnote 163

Japan furnishes an example under which the hitherto alien legal notion of the right to pursuit of happiness made an abrupt entry into the Japanese legal landscape. American pedigree notwithstanding, sophisticated jurisprudential theories on the nature and limits of the right soon ushered in, injecting a splash of complexity to the constitutional narrative. Such jurisprudential and interpretive evolution is propelled, galvanized and animated by the distinct yet concerted efforts of courts, governmental institutions and the academia, and these efforts helped breathe life into and preserve the contemporary relevance of an otherwise aspirational statements.

II. The Right to Pursuit of Happiness in the South Korean Constitution of 1987

Like its East Asian neighbor, the South Korean Constitution also inscribes a right to pursuit of happiness. Article 10 provides that:

All citizens shall be assured of human worth and dignity and have the right to pursuit of happiness. It shall be the duty of the State to confirm and guarantee the fundamental and inviolable human rights of individuals.Footnote 164

The right did not secure a berth in the original 1948 version of the Constitution, adopted in the same year that South Korea was established. Its incorporation only came about as a result of the eighth revision of the 1948 Constitution in 1980, orchestrated by military dictator Chun Doo-hwan. According to Lim, the move was a purposeful mimicry of the parallel provision in the Japanese Constitution, aimed at bolstering the country’s frail democratic credentials and legitimizing the military regime.Footnote 165 This resembles a kind of constitutional borrowing in service of superficial embellishment and window dressing. Hahm, on the other hand, suggested that the right, which was appended to the preceding dignity clause, served in part to “respond to the complaint that the provision on human dignity by itself was too vague and abstract.”Footnote 166

Very much like their Japanese counterparts, Korean scholars have produced dense and sophisticated discourse unpacking the nuances of the right to pursuit of happiness. Some scholars dismiss the right as nothing more than “a mere ethical proclamation”Footnote 167 devoid of substantive legal significance. Others posit that the right safeguards the “German-inspired” notion of “general freedom of action,” a viewpoint waning in popularity in Japan.Footnote 168 These academic debates have infiltrated and are canvassed in the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court of Korea (CCK). In fact, the CCK has wasted little time constructing a rich corpus of decisions on the right, driven in part by the high frequency of its invocation in pleadings. Indeed, much like the dignity clause, the happiness clause was treated as “a fallback, a catch-all provision by almost everyone claiming violation of his or her constitutional rights.”Footnote 169

The dismissive position taken by some scholars that the right is a non-justiciable declaration of intent has largely fallen out of favor.Footnote 170 Scholars and judges now agree that the right to pursuit of happiness, alongside the right to human dignity, is a comprehensive meta-right that guides the interpretation of and underpins various other individual rights and freedoms. In the Discrimination of Second-Generation Patients of Defoliant Exposure Case, the CCK, embracing the language of the “general freedom of action” theory, declared in no uncertain terms that:

The right to pursue happiness provided in Article 10 of the Constitution does not indicate the right of citizens to actively demand benefits required to pursue happiness from the state, but the right to liberty in the broad sense that citizens are entitled to act freely without being intervened by state powers in pursuing their happiness.Footnote 171

The right has two interrelated dimensions: the right to general freedom of action, and the right to free development of personality.Footnote 172 Consider first the right to general freedom of action. The CCK has held that the right to general freedom of action safeguards not only those actions that are valuable or essential to the development of one’s personality, in contradistinction to the Japanese position, but also covers matters of one’s lifestyle and hobbies, and protects even the right to live a risky lifestyle.Footnote 173 This can be illustrated through a CCK case that is analogous to the Takamatsu District Court case on the temporal limitation on access to online games. In the Case on Prohibition of Nighttime Access to Online Games by Juveniles,Footnote 174 the complainants challenged the constitutionality of the relevant provisions in the Juvenile Protection Act banning juveniles from accessing online games between midnight and 6 a.m., otherwise known as the “shutdown law.” The majority opined that the right to pursuit of happiness encompasses, “in specific terms, the right to general freedom of action and free development of personality, and the protection of general freedom of action also involves the protection of one’s lifestyle and hobbies.”Footnote 175 Restriction on night-time access to online games therefore prima facie infringed upon the juveniles’ right to general freedom of action. Despite this finding, the majority proceeded to dismiss the complaint. In contrast to the Takamatsu District Court, which based its conclusion on the premise that playing online games was not a protected interest such that the right to pursuit of happiness was not engaged in the first place, the shutdown law survived constitutional muster because it satisfied the proportionality test. The majority concluded that the law struck a reasonable balance between the relatively modest burden imposed on juveniles and the societal benefits yielded from reduced social costs linked to internet gaming addiction. The shutdown law would eventually be scrapped in 2021.Footnote 176

The right to “general freedom of action” comprises both a “positive” right to act and a “negative” right not to act in order to achieve “happiness”.Footnote 177 In the Seatbelt Case, the Court held that the right to general freedom of action was rooted in the idea that a free and rational individual was capable of deciding whether or not to engage in an act, for he or she could take care of his or her own affairs. That is why the right to general freedom of action also encompassed the right to live in a dangerous way, under which the right not to wear seatbelts fell. That said, the impugned mandatory seatbelt law would eventually be upheld as proportionate and constitutional.Footnote 178

In the Constitutionality of the Police Action Blocking Passage to Seoul Plaza Case,Footnote 179 the CCK wrestled with the issue of whether the blockade amounted to an unconstitutional restriction on the complainant’s positive right to act. The majority sided with the complainant, ruling that a limitation on the use of a property earmarked for public passage, recreational, and cultural purposes, coupled with the obligation to seek user permission, constituted an undue encroachment on the right to general freedom of action. The general freedom of action likewise undergirds the freedom to contract,Footnote 180 and the workers’ freedom not to organize and not to be forced to join a labor union.Footnote 181 In the Family Ritual Standards Act Case, the CCK invalidated a statute prohibiting the service of alcohol and food to wedding guests on the same ground.Footnote 182

All being said, skepticism toward the right’s breadth remains well and alive within the Court. That is why the CCK has formulated constraints in order to prevent its otherwise unchecked expansion. The Court has repeatedly emphasized that the right to pursuit of happiness will only be relied upon directly in the absence of more specific individual rights, such as the right to freedom of expression, which might be relevant and pleaded at bar.Footnote 183 In other words, “the right to pursue happiness is the supplementary basic right for other specified basic rights.”Footnote 184

Some Justices have sounded a note of caution against the view that the right to general freedom of action ought to protect all spheres of human activity. In the Case on the Act on the Punishment of Commercial Sex Acts, where the criminalization of sex trafficking was challenged, Justices Lee Jung-Mi and Ahn Chang-Ho wrote in their concurring opinion that:

Protecting all human actions that surrender to sensation or desire, instead of rationality, within the framework of the Constitution would indicate that all sorts of socially harmful crimes can be protected if they have been committed under human instinct. This will throw the entire society into disorder and chaos, and make the lives of its members unhappy. The right to pursue happiness should be based on the protection of values shared among members of society and the rational constraint required to enable this. Any desires that are swayed by uncontrolled instinct, thus damaging the values pursued by the community, and the actions that realize such desires, cannot be protected by the right to pursue happiness.Footnote 185

They concluded that:

The sexual self-determination protected by the Constitution derives from liberation from sexual violence, exploitation and oppression. It is highly questionable whether sex trafficking, which commercializes sex and treats it as an object to be traded, and harms a sound sexual culture and sexual morality of society, should be protected within the constitutional framework of ‘sexual self-determination.’Footnote 186

In the Adultery Case of 2015, where the CCK ruled effectively to decriminalize adultery,Footnote 187 Justices Lee Jung-Mi and Ahn Chang-Ho penned a dissent echoing their concurring opinion above:

Nonetheless, the act of adultery committed by a married person is not included in the realm of the protected individual right to sexual self-determination, because such an act would violate the marital fidelity despite he/she chose marriage as a social system and thereby damages the social and legal system, which is marriage based on monogamy, having a destructive impact on the family community . . . . Nevertheless, an act of adultery or fornication that infringes on the legal interests of others or community, beyond his/her own boundary, would depart from the inherent limitation of the right to sexual self-determination.Footnote 188

Consider next the second dimension of the right to pursuit of happiness, the derivative right to free development of personality, which operates to safeguard the basic conditions for personal identity and autonomy.Footnote 189 The right to pursuit of happiness, together with the adjacent right to dignity, furnish the doctrinal substratum on which the German-style “general right to personality” was recognized and anchored.Footnote 190 In the Case on Placing Limitation on Number of Transfer of Workplace by Foreign Workers, the CCK stated that the right to pursuit of happiness, “when concretely expressed, includes the general freedom of action and the right to free development of personality.”Footnote 191 In the Adultery Case, the CCK further declared that the right to free development of personality encapsulated the right to self-determination, and that the latter “connotes the right to sexual self-determination that is the freedom to choose sexual activities and partners.”Footnote 192 In the Case on Public Announcement of List of Successful Candidates for National Bar Examination, the CCK affirmed that it is possible to deduce the right to self-determination in relation to one’s personal information from Article 10, which encompasses “the right that the information holder can determine on his/her own as to when, to whom, and to what extent his/her personal information can be disclosed and used.”Footnote 193

Much like a functional equivalent of Article 13 of the Japanese Constitution, the right to pursuit of happiness in the Korean Constitution supplies “an independent source of justiciable rights, for example, of rights not enumerated in the already fairly extensive bill of rights part of the Constitution.”Footnote 194 It operates as the standard for determining what are the rights that can legitimately be recognized via Article 37(1), which confirms that “[f]reedoms and rights of citizens shall not be neglected on the grounds that they are not enumerated in the Constitution.”Footnote 195 The CCK has demonstrated a notable willingness to recognize unenumerated rights. For instance, in the Case of the Date of the First Phase of the Judicial Examination, the decision to schedule judicial examinations on a Sunday was challenged on the basis that it violated, among others, the right to rest, which lacks explicit textual support in the Korean Constitution. Whilst the claimant did not emerge victorious, the CCK did affirm that the right to rest could be derived from the right to pursuit of happiness via Article 37(1).Footnote 196 Other unenumerated rights proffered include the right to life, sleep, sunshine, and sports etc.Footnote 197

Examining how Japan and Korea approach constitutionalizing the pursuit of happiness in parallel, a host of similarities become immediately apparent. First, constitutionalization unfolded against the backdrop of transnational influence, albeit to varying extents. Article 13 of the Japanese Constitution is a product of direct American involvement in the making of the text, whilst deliberate domestic replication gave birth to the right in Article 10 of the Korean Constitution. Second, German constitutional jurisprudence—in particular, the general right to freedom of action—offered a doctrinal lens that structured the jurisprudential debates on the parameters of the right. Third, the right functions as the source of unenumerated rights and the right to self-determination. It resembles what former President of the Israeli Supreme Court Aharon Barak called a “framework right” or “mother right”—a right at a higher level of generality that supplies a “common roof” below which “daughter rights” of a lower level of generality can be derived.Footnote 198

In conclusion, the trajectory of the right to pursuit of happiness in the Japanese and Korean constitutional landscape illustrates how a foreign legal concept or constitutional provision can be migrated and domesticated. Whilst the American pedigree continues to loom large in the background, it eventually yielded to more complex jurisprudential theories developed by and actively contested among courts, governmental institutions, and academics. This demonstrates that the meaning of constitutionalized happiness is and has not been fixated in time, let alone space. Rather, its malleability and adaptability endow it with the capacity to evolve over time so as to accommodate changing social and political landscapes. The Korean example also exemplifies how a window-dressing provision could be repurposed and transformed by judges into a robust tool to identify and rectify constitutional illegality.

F. Conclusion

Happiness has since time immemorial wielded profound influence over the trajectory of law and politics. Mounting enthusiasm in recent decades toward the notion that happiness can be harnessed to devise public policies has rekindled and intensified interest in theorizing and transforming into actionable programs the intricate interplay between happiness, law, and politics. The fact that happiness has secured the pride of place in myriad codified constitutions, a phenomenon which I term “constitutionalization of happiness,” is one such manifestation.

This article is an original attempt to explore the universe of the constitutionalization of happiness. It analyzes all constitutional provisions in force as of 2022 that contain either or both of the terms happiness and well-being, and this audit reveals that they boil down to three categories—happiness as a national objective, happiness as a policy paradigm, and the pursuit of happiness as a human right. The meaning and jurisprudential landscape of happiness provisions in a specific constitutional framework is molded by, on top of the semantic and structural configuration, a dynamic interplay among three factors, which include the indigenous and socio-cultural conception of happiness of that state, interpretations put forward by judges and other constitutional actors, and transnational influences such as the migration of constitutional ideas and jurisprudence.

Presenting a constitutional account of happiness is the central thrust of this article. This means that it inevitably falls short of addressing other interesting questions about the relationship between constitutions and happiness, among which includes the empirical relationship, if any, between the two. Indeed, as early as 1951, Karl Loewenstein questioned whether “the constitution [is] instrumental for the pursuit of happiness of the people.”Footnote 199 This question echoes a recurrent theme that has occupied scholars in comparative constitutional law for many years—the incongruence between the text and practice. Future research should address the empirical relationship between happiness provisions, or more generally the different types of constitutional arrangements, and the actual level of happiness of citizens. It is worth noting that prior studies have found evidence that democratic institutionsFootnote 200 and economic freedomsFootnote 201 are robust predictors of happiness or subjective well-being. To fully harness the potential of constitutions as an engine to promote happiness, research into the “constitutional determinants” of happiness should take center stage.

Competing Interests

None declared.

Funding

None sought or received.

APPENDIX: SELECTED HAPPINESS PROVISIONS IN NATIONAL CONSTITUTIONS IN FORCE AS OF 2022 Footnote 202

References

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3 Jerome Moran, Aristotle on Eudaimonia, 17 Think 91 (2018).

4 Derek Bok, The Politics of Happiness: What Government can Learn from the New Research on Well-being 5 (2016).

5 Karma Ura, Sabina Alkire & Tshoki Zangmo, A Short Guide to GNH Index 6 (2012).

6 See Bok, supra note 4, at 4.

7 Zachary Elkins, Tom Ginsburg & James Melton, The Endurance of National Constitutions 41–42 (2009).

8 Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Anayasası [Constitution] 1982, Madde 5 (Turk.) (emphasis added).

9 Daehanminkuk Hunbeob [Hunbeob] [Constitution] 1987, art. 10 (S. Kor.) (emphasis added).

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13 Yaniv Roznai, Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments (2014).

14 3 James Wilson, Works of James Wilson 721 (1804), quoted in Carl L. Becker, The Declaration of Independence: A Study in the History of Political Ideas 108 (1958).

15 Thomas Paine & Mark Philp, Rights of Man, Common Sense, and Other Political Writings 263 (2009).

16 Douglas Moggach, Freedom and Perfection: German Debates on the State in the Eighteenth Century, 42 Can. J. Pol. Sci. 1003, 1007 (2009).

17 Id.

18 Bok, supra note 4, at 4.

19 Organization of American States, American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, para. 1, May 2, 1948, O.A.S. Res. XXX, adopted May 2, 1948, reprinted in Basic Documents Pertaining to Human Rights in the Inter-American System, O.A.S. Doc. OEA/Ser.L.V//II.82, doc.6 rev.1, at 17 (1992).

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21 Tom Ginsburg & Alberto Simpser, Introduction: Constitutions in Authoritarian Regimes, in Constitutions in Authoritarian Regimes 2 (Tom Ginsburg & Alberto Simpser eds., 2014).

22 Ustawa Rządowa z dnia 3 maja 1791 roku, ch. VII (emphasis added).

23 1793 Constitution, art. 1 (Fr.) (emphasis added).

24 Nihonkoku Kenpō [Kenpō] [Constitution] 1947, art. 13 (Japan) (emphasis added).

25 Constitution of Angola 2010, art. 21(d).

26 Constitution of Namibia 1990, pmbl.

27 Albert H.Y. Chen, Constitutions and Constitutionalism: China, in Constitutionalism in Context 68 (David S. Law ed., 2022).

28 See The Exploration of Happiness: Present and Future Perspectives (Antonella Delle Fave ed., 2013) (offering an excellent overview of the state of the field of happiness studies); see also Sabrina Intelisano, Julia Krasko & Maike Luhmann, Integrating Philosophical and Psychological Accounts of Happiness and Well-Being, 21 J. Happiness Stud. 161 (2020).

29 Analysis was carried out using constitutional texts (and their translations) available on the Constitute Project website operated by the Comparative Constitutions Project. Zachary Elkins, Tom Ginsburg & James Melton, Constitute: The World’s Constitutions to Read, Search, and Compare, constituteproject.org.

30 Jason R. Raibley, Happiness is Not Well-Being, 13 J. Happiness Stud. 1105 (2012).

31 Конституция на Република България [Constitution] 1991, art. 24 (Bulg.).

32 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Happiness and the Attainment of Happiness: An Islamic Perspective, 29 J. L. Relig. 76, 76 (2014).

33 Rosalind Dixon & Tom Ginsburg, Deciding Not to Decide: Deferral in Constitutional Design, 9 Int’l J. Cons. L. 636 (2011).

34 David S. Law & Hsiang-Yang Hsieh, Judicial Review of Constitutional Amendments: Taiwan, in Constitutionalism in Context, supra note 27, at 192.

35 Sujit Choudhry, Migration as a New Metaphor in Comparative Constitutional Law, in The Migration of Constitutional Ideas 1–36 (Sujit Choudhry ed., 2007).

36 See Hans Agné, Democratic Founding: We the People and the Others, 10 Int’l J. Cons. L. 836 (2012).

37 See generally Benedikt Goderis & Mila Versteeg, The Diffusion of Constitutional Rights, 39 Int’l Rev. L. Econ. 1 (2014) (analyzing in detail mechanisms of transnational diffusion of constitutional norms and provisions).

38 Fernando Leal, National Objectives, in Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law (Rainer Grote, Frauke Lachenmann & Rüdiger Wolfrum eds., 2017).

39 Jeff King, Constitutions as Mission Statements, in Social and Political Foundations of Constitutions 81 (Denis J. Galligan & Mila Versteeg eds., 2014).

40 Leal, supra note 38.

41 Id.

42 Constitution of Eswatini 2005, pmbl.

43 Radthathammanoon [Constitution] 2017, pmbl. (Thai.).

44 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, pmbl. (Bhutan).

45 Constitution of Kenya 2010, pmbl.

46 Constitution of Armenia 1995, pmbl.

47 King, supra note 39.

48 Shulztiner & Carmi, supra note 10, at 476.

49 Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Anayasası [Constitution] 1982, Madde 5 (Turk.).

50 Azerbaycan Republikasi Konstitusiya [Constitution] 1995, art. 16 (Azer.).

51 Constitution of Honduras 1982, art. 1.

52 Constitución de la República Oriental del Uruguay [Constitution] 1997, art. 50.

53 Constitution of Guinea-Bissau 1996, art. 11.

54 Konstituisaun Repúblika Demokrátika Timor-Leste [Constitution] 2002, art. 12(2).

55 Constitution of Eswatini 2005, art. 59(1) and Constitution of Ghana 1992, art. 36(1).

56 Constitution of Nigeria (1979), § 16(1)(b).

57 Julieta Rossi & Daniel M. Brinks, Social and Economic Rights: Argentina, in Constitutionalism in Context, supra note 27, at 263.

58 Bamidele Aturu v. Minister of Petroleum Resources, Suit no. FHC/ABJ/CS/591/2009, at 132 (Nigeria). For an overview of the case, see A. E. Akintayo, Economic Diversification in the Context of a Constitutional Right to Happiness: Implications for Law and Policy Initiatives, 5 Unilag J. Hum. 96, 104 (2017).

59 Akinola E. Akintayo, A Good Thing from Nazareth? Stemming the Tide of Neo-Liberalism Against Socio-Economic Rights: Lessons from the Nigerian case of Bamidele Aturu v. Minister of Petroleum Resources and Other, 15 ESR Rev. 5, 7 (2014).

60 Stjórnarskrá lýðveldsins Íslands [Constitution] 1944, art. 76 (Ice.).

61 Hiến pháp [Constitution] 1992, art. 60(3) (Viet.).

62 Constitución Política de la República de Nicaragua [Constitution] 1987, art. 34.

63 Constitution of the Philippines 1987, art. II, § 13.

64 Constitution of Panama 1972, art. 127.

65 Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos [Constitution] 1917, art. 4 (Mex.).

66 Constitución Política de Colombia [Constitution] 1991, art. 366 (Colom.).

67 Constitución Política de Costa Rica [Constitution] 1949, art. 57 (Costa Rica).

68 Constitution de la République d’Haïti [Constitution] 1987, art. 247 (Haiti).

69 Constitution of Mozambique 2004, art. 109.

70 Constitution of Guyana 1980, art. 21.

71 Azerbaycan Republikasi Konstitusiya [Constitution] 1995, art. 35 (Azer.).

72 Constitution of Tanzania 1977, art. 25 (Tanz.).

73 Ginsburg & Simpser, supra note 21, at 26.

74 Constitución de la República de Cuba [Constitution] 2019, art. 45 (Cuba).

75 Dastuurka Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya [Constitution] 2012, art. 31 (Som.).

76 David S. Law & Mila Versteeg, Sham Constitutions, 101 Calif. L. Rev. 863, 867 (2013).

77 Jigmi Y. Thinley & Janette Hartz-Karp, National Progress, Sustainability and Higher Goals: The Case of Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness, 2 Sustainable Earth 1, 3 (2019).

78 Tim Harford, Why Happiness is Easy to Venerate and Hard to Generate, Financial Times (Mar. 1, 2019), https://www.ft.com/content/7f73002a-3a95-11e9-b856-5404d3811663.

79 Karma Ura, Sabina Alkire, Tshoki Zangmo & Karma Wangdi, An Extensive Analysis of GNH Index 7 (2012).

80 Id. at 10.

81 Id.

82 Quoted in id. at 8.

83 Jigmi Y. Thinley, What is Gross National Happiness? 4 (Second International Conference on Gross National Happiness, 2007).

84 Jigme Khesar, Foreword to The Oxford Handbook of Happiness, at vii (Susan David, Ilona Boniwell & Amanda Conley Ayers eds., 2014).

85 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 9(2) (Bhutan).

86 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 20(1) (Bhutan).

87 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 4(1) (Bhutan).

88 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 5(1) (Bhutan).

89 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 5(3) (Bhutan).

90 Stephen J. Turner, The Constitution of Bhutan: A Quantitative Environmental Standard, in Environmental Rights: The Development of Standards 329 (Stephen J. Turner, Dinah L. Shelton, Jona Razzaque, Owen McIntyre & James R. May eds., 2019).

91 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 5(2) (Bhutan).

92 Druk-gi cha-thrims-chen-mo [Constitution] 2008, art. 9(3) (Bhutan).

93 Michael Givel, Evolution of the Meaning of Happiness in Modern Bhutan from 2008 to 2019, 43 J. Bhutan Stud. 47, 53–56 (2020).

94 The Tobacco Control Act 2010, pmbl. (Bhutan).

95 The University of Medical Sciences Act 2012, pmbl. (Bhutan).

96 Water Act 2011, pmbl. (Bhutan).

97 David S. Law, Isolation and Globalization: The Dawn of Legal Education in Bhutan, 9 Yonsei L.J. 41, 45 (2018).

98 Unai Villalba, Buen Vivir vs Development: A Paradigm Shift in the Andes?, 34 Third World Q. 1427, 1427 (2013).

99 Marina Mero-Figueroa, Emilio Galdeano-Gómez, Laura Piedra-Muñoz & Moisés Obaco, Measuring Well-Being: A Buen Vivir (Living Well) Indicator for Ecuador, 152 Soc. Indic. Res. 265, 265 (2020).

100 Julien Vanhulst & Adrian E. Beling, Buen vivir: Emergent Discourse within or Beyond Sustainable Development?, 101 Ecol. Econ. 54, 56 (2014).

101 Martin Calisto Friant & John Langmore, The Buen Vivir: A Policy to Survive the Anthropocene?, 6 Glob. Pol’y 64 (2014).

102 Mero-Figueroa, Galdeano-Gómez, Piedra-Muñoz & Obaco, supra note 99, at 265.

103 Sara Caria & Rafael Domínguez, Ecuador’s Buen vivir: A New Ideology for Development, 43 Lat. Am. Persp. 18, 20 (2015).

104 Vanhulst & Beling, supra note 100, at 57.

105 Edurado Gudynas, Buen Vivir: Today’s Tomorrow, 54 Dev. 441, 442 (2011).

106 C. Unai Villalba-Eguiluz & Iker Etxano, Buen Vivir vs Development (II): The Limits of (Neo-)Extractivism, 138 Ecol. Econ. 1, 1 (2017).

107 Vanhulst & Beling, supra note 100, at 56.

108 Id. at 57.

109 Gudynas, supra note 105, at 442.

110 Constitución Política del Estado [Constitution] 2009, art. 8(I) (Bol.).

111 Vanhulst & Beling, supra note 100, at 57.

112 Id.

113 Constitución Política del Estado [Constitution] 2009, art. 306(II) (Bol.).

114 Constitución Política de la República del Ecuador [Constitution] 2008, pmbl. (Ecuador).

115 Constitución Política de la República del Ecuador [Constitution] 2008, art. 3(5) (Ecuador).

116 Id.

117 Vanhulst & Beling, supra note 100, at 56.

118 Id.

119 Gudynas, supra note 105, at 443.

120 Constitución Política de la República del Ecuador [Constitution] 2008, art. 71 (Ecuador).

121 Constitución Política de la República del Ecuador [Constitution] 2008, art. 72 (Ecuador).

122 Craig M. Kauffman & Pamela L. Martin, Can Rights of Nature Make Development More Sustainable? Why Some Ecuadorian Lawsuits Succeed and Others Fail, 92 World Dev. 130, 130 (2017).

123 Corte Constitucional del Ecuador [Constitutional Court of Ecuador] Nov. 10, 2021, Sentencia No. 1149-19-JP/20 (Ecuador), translated in Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature and Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, https://celdf.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Los-Cedros-Decision-ENGLISH-Final.pdf (Ecuador).

124 Id. at para. 35.

125 Id. at para. 337.

126 Id. at para. 48.

127 Id. at para. 50.

128 Ley Nº 71, Ley de derechos de la madre tierra 2010 (Bol.).

129 Ley Nº 300, Ley Marco De La Madre Tierra Y Desarrollo Integral Para Vivir Bien 2012 (Bol.).

130 Joseph R. Grodin, Rediscovering the State Constitutional Right to Happiness and Safety, 25 Hastings Const. Law Q. 1, 1 (1997). See also Carli N. Conklin, The Pursuit of Happiness in the Founding Era: An Intellectual History (2019) (offering a more detailed history of the right to pursuit of happiness in the American context).

131 388 U.S. 1, 12 (1967) (U.S.).

132 262 U.S. 390, 399 (1923) (U.S.).

133 See Albert P. Blaustein, Our Most Important Export: The Influence of the United States Constitution Abroad, 3 Conn. J. Int’l L. 15, 21–22 (1987); see also Shulztiner & Carmi, supra note 10, at 469 (“Three more countries are small islands that were under the United States’ influence for an extended period of time, in addition to Liberia, whose legal and political system was founded by former slaves who emigrated from the United States in the nineteenth century and borrowed key elements from the United States Constitution.”).

134 Constitution of Liberia 1847, art. 1.

135 Constitution of Liberia 1986, art. 1.

136 Constitution de la République d’Haïti [Constitution] 1987, pmbl. (Haiti).

137 Constitution of Namibia 1990, pmbl.

138 Constitution de la République des Seychelles 1993, pmbl.

139 Nihonkoku Kenpō [Kenpō] [Constitution] 1947, art. 13 (Japan) (emphasis added).

140 Chaihark Hahm & Sung Ho Kim, Making We the People: Democratic Constitutional Founding in Postwar Japan and South Korea (2015).

141 Robert E. Ward, The Origins of the Present Japanese Constitution, 50 Am. Pol. Sci. Rev. 980, 1008 (1956).

142 David S. Law, Imposed Constitutions and Romantic Constitutions, in The Law and Legitimacy of Imposed Constitutions (Richard Albert, Xenophon Contiades & Alkmene Fotiadou eds., 2019) (arguing that “the Kenpō has, from the outset, enjoyed strong popular support and, in that sense, was never truly ‘imposed’ upon the Japanese people”).

143 Giorgio Fabio Colombo, The Right to Pursue Happiness and Japanese Legal Culture: The Hunting of the Snark, 13 J. Comp. L. 33, 35 (2018).

144 Res. Comm’n on the Const. of the H.R. of Japan, Final Rep. 388, https://www.shugiin.go.jp/internet/itdb_kenpou.nsf/html/kenpou/report.pdf/$File/report.pdf (2005).

145 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], 1 BvR 253/56, Jan. 16, 1957, https://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/SharedDocs/Entscheidungen/EN/1957/01/rs19570116_1bvr025356en.html (Ger.).

146 Nobuyoshi Ashibe, Kenpō [Constitutional Law] 130 (Lí Hông-hi trans., 2015).

147 Res. Comm’n on the Const. of the H.R. of Japan, supra note 144, at 388.

148 Takamatsu Chihō Saibansho [Takamatsu Dist. Ct.] Aug. 30, 2022, Reiwa 2 (waワ) no. 339, Saibansho saibanrei jōhō [Saibansho web.] 1, 43–44, http://www.courts.go.jp (Japan).

149 Id.

150 Ashibe, supra note 146, at 131.

151 Id.

152 Id. at 134.

153 Colombo, supra note 143, at 38.

154 Saikō Saibansho [Sup. Ct.] Dec. 24, 1969, Showa 40 (Aあ) no. 1187, 23 Saikō Saibansho Keiji Hanreishû [Keishû] 162 (Japan).

155 Saikō Saibansho [Sup. Ct.] Dec. 15, 1995, Heisei 2 (Aあ) no. 848, 49 Saikō Saibansho Keiji Hanreishû [Keishû] 842 (Japan).

156 Minpō [Civ. C.] 1896, art. 750 (Japan).

157 Saikō Saibansho [Sup. Ct.] Dec. 16, 2015, Heisei 26 (Oオ) no. 1023, 69 Saikō Saibansho Minji Hanreishû [Minshû] 2586 (Japan).

158 Saikō Saibansho [Sup. Ct.] Jun. 23, 2021, Reiwa 2 (kuク) no. 102, 266 Saikō Saibansho saibanshū minji [Shūmin] 1 (Japan).

159 Gavan McCormack, Japan’s “Positive Pacifism”: Issues of Historical Memory in Contemporary Foreign Policy, 20 Brown J. World Affs. 73, 73 (2014).

160 Nihonkoku Kenpō [Kenpō] [Constitution] 1947, art. 9 (Japan).

161 Ministry of Defense of Japan, Defense of Japan (Annual White Paper) 216 (2021) (Japan).

162 Cabinet Decision on Development of Seamless Security Legislation to Ensure Japan’s Survival and Protect its People, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan (July 1, 2014), https://www.mofa.go.jp/fp/nsp/page23e_000273.html (Japan).

163 Hitoshi Nasu, Japan’s 2015 Security Legislation: Challenges to its Implementation under International Law, 92 Int’l L. Stud. 249 (2016).

164 Daehanminkuk Hunbeob [Hunbeob] [Constitution] 1987, art. 10 (S. Kor.) (emphasis added).

165 Jibong Lim, Pursuit of Happiness Clause in the Korean Constitution, 1 J. Korean L. 71, 75 (2001).

166 Chaihark Hahm, Constitutional Discourse on Human Dignity in South Korea, in Human Dignity in Asia 63 (Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu ed., 2022).

167 Id. at 66.

168 Id. These debates are summarized in Lim, supra note 165, at 76–79.

169 Hahm, supra note 166, at 65.

170 Lim, supra note 165, at 79.

171 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Apr. 24, 2014, 2011Hun-Ba228 (S. Kor.).

172 Nakin Sung, Hunbeob Hak [Constitutional Law] 294 (2005); and Ha-Yurl Kim, Hunbeob Kangui [Constitutional Law] 308 (4th ed. 2021).

173 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Oct. 30, 2003, 2002Hun-Ma518 (S. Kor.).

174 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Apr. 24, 2014, 2011Hun-Ma659 & 683 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

175 Id.

176 Bahk Eun-ji, Korea to Lift Game Curfew for Children, Korean Times (Aug. 25, 2021), https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/tech/2021/08/134_314499.html?fl.

177 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Jun. 30, 2011, 2009Hun-Ma406 (S. Kor.).

178 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Oct. 30, 2003, 2002Hun-Ma518 (S. Kor.).

179 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Jun. 30, 2011, 2009Hun-Ma406 (S. Kor.).

180 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Sept. 29, 2011, 2007Hun-Ma1083, 2009Hun-Ma230 & 352 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

181 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Nov. 24, 2005, 2002Hun-Ba95 & 96, 2003Hun-Ba9 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

182 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Oct. 15, 1998, 98Hun-Ma168 (S. Kor.).

183 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Dec. 14, 2000, 99Hun-Ma112 (S. Kor.).

184 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Aug. 28, 2014, 2011Hun-Ba32, 2011Hun-Ka18, 2012Hun-Ba185 (consol.) (S. Kor).

185 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Mar. 31, 2016, 2013Hun-Ka2 (S. Kor.).

186 Id.

187 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Feb. 26, 2015, 2009Hun-Ba17 & 205, 2010Hun-Ba194, 2011Hun-Ba4, 2012Hun-Ba57 & 255 & 411, 2013Hun-Ba139 & 161 & 267 & 276 & 342 & 365, 2014Hun-Ba53 & 464, 2011Hun-Ka31, 2014Hun-Ka4 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

188 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Feb. 26, 2015, 2011Hun-Ba31 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

189 Kim, supra note 172, at 308.

190 Hahm, supra note 166, at 68.

191 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Sept. 29, 2011, 2007Hun-Ma1083, 2009Hun-Ma230 & 352 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

192 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Feb. 26, 2015, 2011Hun-Ba31 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

193 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Mar. 26, 2020, 2018Hun-Ma77 & 283 & 1024 (consol.) (S. Kor.).

194 Chaihark Hahm, Law, Culture, and the Politics of Confucianism, 16 Colum. J. Asian L. 253, 283 (2002).

195 Daehanminkuk Hunbeob [Hunbeob] [Constitution] 1987, art. 37(1) (S. Kor.).

196 Hunbeobjaepanso [Const. Ct.], Sept. 27, 2001, 2000Hun-Ma159 (S. Kor.).

197 Sung, supra note 172, at 294.

198 Aharon Barak, Human Dignity: The Constitutional Value and the Constitutional Right 156–57 (2015).

199 Karl Loewestein, Reflections on the Value of Constitutions in Our Revolutionary Age, in Constitutions and Constitutional Trends since World War II: An Examination of Significant of Postwar Public Law with Particular Reference to the Constitutions of Western Europe 191 (Arnold J. Zurcher ed., 1951).

200 Bruno S. Frey & Alois Stutzer, Happiness Prospers in Democracy, 1 J. Happiness Stud. 79 (2000).

201 Rok Spruk & Aleskandar Kešeljević, Institutional Origins of Subjective Well-Being: Estimating the Effects of Economic Freedom on National Happiness, 17 J. Happiness Stud. 659 (2016).

202 The provisions are extracted from the Constitute website, https://constituteproject.org/. Only the happiness provisions that have been referred to or discussed in the main text are excerpted.