Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Munkman on Employer's Liability

Munkman on Employer's Liability

Edited by: Marcus Pilgerstorfer KC
Price: £229.99

Adoption Law:
A Practical Guide 2nd ed




Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Enquiries of Local Authorities
and Water Companies:
A Practical Guide 7th ed



 Keith Pugsley, Ken Miles


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


The Making of a European Constitution: Judges and Law Beyond Constitutive Power


ISBN13: 9780415439053
Published: October 2007
Publisher: Routledge-Cavendish
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



Despatched in 6 to 8 days.

Also available as
£43.99

An original and innovative recasting of constitutionalism, written by acknowledged experts in the field, this empirically grounded and theoretically informed volume addresses the strategies and philosophies that judges and lawyers bring to bear when creating European constitutional jurisprudence; investigating and promoting promotes the sustainability of a theory or praxis of 'procedural' constitutionalism.

Building upon European and American critical legal scholarship, Michelle Everson and Julia Eisner argue that constitutional adjudication has never been the neutral matter of a mere judicial 'identification' of the values, norms and procedures that each society seeks to concretise in its own body of constitutional law. Instead, a 'mythology' of comprehensive national constitutional settlement has obscured the primary legal constitutional conundrum that is created by the requirement that a judiciary must always adapt its constitutional jurisprudence to the evolving values that are to be found within any society; but must always, also, maintain the integrity and autonomy of the law itself.

European judges and lawyers, having been denied recourse to all forms of constitutional mythology, provide us with an alternative model of constitutionalism; one that does not require a founding myth of constitutional settlement, and one which both secures the autonomy of law, as well as ensures dialogue between law and society. This occurs, however, not through grand theories of 'constitutional adjudication' but, as "The Making of a European Constitution" documents, rather through a practical process.

Subjects:
EU Law
Contents:
Introduction
Constitutional Mo(u)rning
Retelling the Legal Integration Story
Forgetting Law
Adjudicating Non-authoritative Law
Constitutionalising the Institutional Balance of Powers
The Principled Judicial Mechanics of Constitutional Morphogenesis
Constitutionalism Beyond Constitutions