Search
 
 
Saturday, November 21, 2009
 
 
BOOKS
Constitution Makers on Constitution Making
The Experience of Eight Nations
 
 
Rowman & Littlefield
 
 
Paperback
 
6'' x 9''
 
200 pages
 
ISBN: 0-8447-3666-X
 
 
Examination Copies
In eight pairs of papers, this book tells the story of the writing of the constitutions of France, Greece, the United States, Yugoslavia, Spain, Egypt, Venezuela, and Nigeria.
 

Eighty new constitutions, more than half of the written national constitutions in effect, have been written and adopted just since 1974, an average of more than five a year. At a time when the United States is observing the two-hundreth anniversary of its Constitution, the median age of all constitutions in the world is less than fifteen years. Never before have so many living constitution makers, in so many different kinds of regimes, been still active and capable of telling the story, firsthand, of how their nation's constitution was made.

In eight pairs of papers, written from differing perspectivies, this book tells the story of the writing of the constitutions of France, Greece, the United States, Yugoslavia, Spain, Egypt, Venezuela, and Nigeria. It also includes an analysis by constitutional experts from twenty countries of how to put into practice the principles of constitutionalism--political liberty, security of rights, and self-government.

Robert A. Goldwin is a resident scholar of constitutional studies at AEI.

Shop at Amazon.com

 
Table of Contents

Preface
Contributors

  • Introduction
  • The Drafting of the French Constitution of 1958
  • Making the Constitution of Greece
  • The Writing of the Constitution of the United States
  • The Creation of 1974 Constitution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
  • The Writing of the Constitution of Spain
  • The Writing of the 1971 Egyptian Constitution
  • The Making of the Venezuelan Constitution
  • The Making of the Nigerian Constitution
  • Conclusion