| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs
|
National Law School | Reference | 342.5402 ROZ (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | HB | Available | 36673 |
|
|
No cover image available |
|
|
|
|
||
| 342.085 SAE-2 Human rights and Islam : | 342.0872 MCH Aboriginal title : | 342.5402 KUM Objects, perspective & implications of the constitution (One hundred and fifteenth amendment) 115 Bill, 2013 A critical evaluation | 342.5402 ROZ Unconstitutional constitutional amendments : | 343.0526 MOD Model tax convention on income and on capital | 343.072 AND Dawn raids under challenge : | 343.072 BER Legal problems of the poor : |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-315) and index.
Part I. Comparative constitutional unamendability -- Explicit constitutional unamendability -- Implicit constitutional unamendability -- Supra-constitutional unamendability -- Part II. Towards a theory of constitutional unamendability -- The nature of constitutional amendment powers -- The scope of constitutional amendment powers -- The spectrum of constitutional amendment powers -- Part III. Enforcing constitutional unamendability -- Understanding judicial review of constitutional amendments -- Exercising judicial review of constitutional amendments.
"Can constitutional amendments be unconstitutional? The problem of 'unconstitutional constitutional amendments' has become one of the most widely debated issues in comparative constitutional theory, constitutional design, and constitutional adjudication. This book describes and analyses the increasing tendency in global constitutionalism substantively to limit formal changes to constitutions. The challenges of constitutional unamendability to constitutional theory become even more complex when constitutional courts enforce such limitations through substantive judicial review of amendments, often resulting in the declaration that these constitutional amendments are 'unconstitutional'. Combining historical comparisons, constitutional theory, and a wide comparative study, [the author] sets out to explain what the nature of amendment power is, what its limitations are, and what the role of constitutional courts is and should be when enforcing limitations on constitutional amendments."-- Provided by publisher.
There are no comments on this title.