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| Dimensions: 9.25'' x 6.25'' |
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| 456 pages |
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AEI Press
(Washington)
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| Publication Date: May 1989 |
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| Paperback |
| ISBN: 084473652X |
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In almost all countries with diverse populations, we have seen not the "domestic tranquility" spoken of in the preamble of the Constitution of the United States, but domestic hostility between fellow citizens--blacks and whites in the United States, Dutch speakers and French speakers in Belgium, Serbs and Albanians in Yugoslavia, Castilian speakers and Catalan speakers in Spain, Malays and Chinese in Malaysia, Sikhs, Muslims, and Hindus in India, and many others.
The ways nations have sought to forge national unity in the face of such conflicts form the subject of this volume. Eight very different constitutions are presented, analyzed, and dicussed. These constitutions come from nations with different histories and political systems, but they have in common a significant diversity of races, religions, languages, or nationalities.
Each chapter in this book contains a major paper on the constitutional experience of a country, a shorter commentary on that paper by a fellow countryman writing from a different perspective, and edited portions of the transcript of a discussion among constitutional experts from twenty countries.
Robert A. Goldwin is a resident scholar of constitutional studies at AEI.

Table of Contents

Introduction
The Indian Constitution: An Experiment in Unity and Diversity
The Constitution and American Diversity
Communities, Languages, Regions, and the Belgian Constitution, 1831-1985
The Canadian Constitution and Diversity
Swiss Federalism
Spanish Democracy and the Estado de las Autonomias
Unity and Diversity: The Constitution of Malaysia
How Political and Constitutional Institutions Deal with a People of Ethnic Diversity: The Yugoslav Experience
Final Thoughts and Questions
Contributors