nccr trade regulation - swiss national centre of competence in research
NCCR
Home Research Projects IP1 - Constitutionalism Project Description People and Institutions NCCR Publications Workshops & Seminars Contact IP2 - Decision-Making IP3 - Regionalism/SDT IP4 - Human Rights IP5 - Agriculture IP6 - Energy IP7 - eDiversity IP8 - Services IP9 - Biotechnology IP10 - Finance IP11 - Investment IP12.1 - Primary Commodities IP12.2 - Exchange Rate NCCR Publications NCCR Conferences & Events NCCR Portrait News Network Events & Links
 


Login
 
 
ip1.jpg

Home arrow Research Projects arrow IP1 - Constitutionalism arrow NCCR Publications arrow Compensatory Constitutionalism: The Function and Potential of Fundamental Int. Norms and Structures
Compensatory Constitutionalism: The Function and Potential of Fundamental Int. Norms and Structures Print
Leiden Journal of International Law, vol. 19 (2006), pp. 570-610.
Access via Cambridge Journals Online


Abstract

The article conceives international (or global) constitutionalism as a legal argument which recommends and strengthens efforts (legal and political) to compensate for ongoing de-constitutionalization on the domestic level. Although the notions ‘international constitution’ and ‘international constitutionalism’ have in recent years served as buzzwords in various discourses, the many meanings of those concepts have not yet been fully explored and disentangled. This paper suggests a specific understanding of those concepts. It highlights various aspects and elements of micro- and macro-constitutionalization in international law, and identifies anti-constitutionalist trends. On this basis, the paper finds that, although no international constitution in a formal sense exists, fundamental norms in the international legal order do fulfil constitutional functions. Because those norms can reasonably be qualified as having a constitutional quality, they may not be summarily discarded in the event of a conflict with domestic constitutional law. Because the relevant norms form a transnational constitutional network, and cannot be aligned in an abstract hierarchy, conflict resolution requires a balancing of interests in concrete cases. Finally, because constitutionalism historically and prescriptively means asking for a legitimate constitution, a constitutionalist reading of the international legal order provokes the question of its legitimacy. This question is pressing, because state sovereignty and consent are – on good grounds – no longer accepted as the sole source of legitimacy of international law. International constitutionalism – as understood in this paper – does not ask for state-like forms of legitimacy of a world government, but stimulates the search for new mechanisms to strengthen the legitimacy of global governance.



LJL19_03.jpg




SNF - Swiss National Science Foundation The National Centres of Competence in Research are a research instrument of the Swiss National Science Foundation