没有宪法时刻的宪法设计:来自宗教分裂社会的教训

IF 0.2 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CORNELL INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL Pub Date : 2016-07-21 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2812662
Asli U. Bali, Hanna Lerner
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引用次数: 10

摘要

近年来,从伊拉克、阿富汗到埃及和突尼斯,高风险的宪法起草工作频频登上新闻头条。在某些情况下,随着转型社会努力解决关于身份的根本冲突,激烈的辩论已经让位于冲突甚至暴力。在以深刻的宗教分歧为特征的社会中,制宪的挑战更为严峻,就像许多目前正在经历政治转型的穆斯林占多数的国家一样。在本文中,我们研究了当前新宪法实践浪潮的一个显著特征:在国家宗教或世俗认同存在深刻分歧的情况下,宪法起草面临的挑战。这篇文章提供了三个主要贡献。首先,我们对埃及、印度尼西亚、印度、以色列、黎巴嫩、突尼斯和土耳其这七个研究相对不足的国家的宪法制定进行了详细的定性检查和比较。其次,我们对这些案例的研究对文献中一些常见的假设进行了批判性的评估,这些假设来自于经过充分研究的西方宪法起草案例,如美国和法国的宪法起草案例。我们认为,将宪法起草理解为旨在解决身份问题和巩固“我们人民”基本定义的高级立法,往好了说是不恰当的,往坏了说,可能会加剧宗教分裂国家的冲突。第三,我们开发了一个框架,通过识别从定性案例中提取的新颖设计特征及其潜在优点,扩大了比较法文献中讨论的宪法起草工具和策略的范围。
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Constitutional Design Without Constitutional Moments: Lessons from Religiously Divided Societies
High stakes constitution-writing exercises have burst into the headlines in recent years from Iraq and Afghanistan to Egypt and Tunisia. In some cases, heated debates have given way to conflict and even violence as transitioning societies struggle to resolve fundamental conflicts over identity. The challenges of constitution-making are more acute in societies that are marked by deep religious divisions, as is the case in many Muslim-majority countries that are currently undergoing political transitions. In this Article, we examine a distinctive feature of the current wave of new constitutional exercises: the challenge of constitution-drafting under conditions of deep disagreement over the state’s religious or secular identity.The Article offers three major contributions. First, we provide a detailed qualitative examination and comparison of constitution-making in the seven relatively understudied cases of Egypt, Indonesia, India, Israel, Lebanon, Tunisia and Turkey. Second, our examination of these cases informs a critical assessment of some common assumptions in the literature that are drawn from well-studied, Western cases of constitution-drafting like those of the United States and France. We argue that an understanding of constitution-drafting as higher-order law-making that is designed to resolve questions of identity and entrench a foundational definition of “we the people” is inapposite at best and, at worst, may exacerbate conflict in religiously-divided countries. Thirdly, we develop a framework that expands the range of constitution-drafting tools and strategies discussed in the comparative law literature by identifying novel design features drawn from the qualitative cases and their potential merits.
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1967, the Cornell International Law Journal is one of the oldest and most prominent international law journals in the country. Three times a year, the Journal publishes scholarship that reflects the sweeping changes that are taking place in public and private international law. Two of the issues feature articles by legal scholars, practitioners, and participants in international politics as well as student-written notes. The third issue is dedicated to publishing papers generated by the Journal"s annual Symposium, held every spring in Ithaca, New York.
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