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Lecture 2 of Constitutional and Administrative Law: Comparing Constitutions

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 It has no answer for potential issues with the judges or parliamentarians.
 People has not specialized knowledge and power is placed on them.

Lecture 2: Comparing Constitutions

Brief history

The term constitution originates in biology/medicine.

 The state of one’s human body. Good state of health.

Started to be metaphorically used to describe the political state or nature of
population.

 The situation of a group of people as determined by different factors.
o Geography, climate, composition, rules, etc.
 Progressively, its usage narrows down to identify the institutional shape and
makeup of the political settlement in a country.

A specific legal for this world meaning existed, in parallel.

 'Constitutiones’ were a specific type of laws.
 Roman Empire: constitutions of Caracalla.

Things changed because of 2 revolutions in 18 th century.

 French Revolution.
 US revolution/independence.

Despite revolutions were important, it wasn’t the beginning of Constitutional History
in modern sense.

 Varied countries have had previously experimented with a certain kind of
document/set of rules.
o It aspired to order the exercise of power in nations.
o Even monarchical nations had tried with these documents prior to the
existence of the US and French Constitutions.
o US was less transformative than it is traditionally thought.
 1750-onwards: a break in the past, in a constitutional sense.

The UK Constitutional Framework cannot be understood without history.

 It eroded by accident across the centuries and a long before.
o It has been construed across the history, rather than with a sudden
break with the past history of the country.
 Despite Glorious Revolution, not a terrible breakout with the past history.
o UK constitutionalism hasn’t experimented the break with the past, as it
happened in other countries.

, o Glorious Revolution was a relevant part of that history, instead of a
brutal change of what had happened before.
 UK Constitutionalism is a product of that history, not of a break.

What is a modern Constitution for?

It is supposed to establish legitimate governmental power.

 Conditions of exercise that the government should rule.
 The limits of what governments can do.
 Legitimation, regulation, and limitation of government (at the same time).

Comprehensively regulate the exercise of public power (and private sometimes).

 It regulates the entire use of public power.
o It establishes who and what should pursue the power.
 All the powers of the state must face back to the Constitution.
 Don’t presuppose the right of the pre-existing ruler to rule but constitute it.
o Metaphor of the social contract.

It started to provide a blueprint for the common good of the people.

 Aspirational/foundational values of a society.
o Ex: people are born equal and there shouldn’t be discriminated.
 It provides rights for the citizens.
o How are these rights effectively provided?

It has progressively acquired a symbolic function.

 It means a lot more than a simple written document.
o Most of them are written/codified documents anyway.

How does the modern constitutions do all those things?

Modern constitutions are comprehensive.

 They tend to regulate and limit all government.
o Including legislatures.
 Government, in this sense, means the entire state apparatus.
o Three state powers.
o Government in narrow sense: executive power.

The constitution itself is normatively superior to ordinary legislation.

 There is a hierarchy of laws in a country: Kelsen pyramid.
 There are especial procedures to do amendments to the constitution.
o Ordinary legislation cannot modify the constitution.
 This implies the idea of rejection of ABSOLUTE SOVEREIGNTY.
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