Administrative / Constitutional Law

Constitutional Rights after Globalisation

By Gavin Anderson
Hart Publishing May 2005

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781841134482
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
May 2005
Format
Hardback , 176 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

'Constitutional Rights After Globalization' juxtaposes the globalisation of the economy and the worldwide spread of constitutional charters of rights. The shift of political authority to powerful economic actors entailed by neo-liberal globalisation challenges the traditional state-centred focus of constitutional law.

Contemporary debate has responded to this challenge in normative terms, whether by reinterpreting rights or redirecting their ends, e.g. to reach private actors. However, globalisation undermines the liberal legalist epistemology on which these approaches rest, by positing the existence of multiple sites of legal production, (e.g. multinational corporations) beyond the state. This dynamic, between globalisation and legal pluralism on one side, and rights constitutionalism on the other, provides the context for addressing the question of rights constitutionalism's counterhegemonic potential.

This shows first that the interpretive and instrumental assumptions underlying constitutional adjudication are empirically suspect: constitutional law tends more to disorder than coherence, and frequently is an ineffective tool for social change. Instead, legal pluralism contends that constitutionalism's importance lies in symbolic terms as a legitimating discourse. The competing liberal and 'new' politics of definition (the latter highlighting how neo-liberal values and institutions constrain political action) are contrasted to show how each advances different agenda. A comparative survey of constitutionalism's engagement with private power shows that conceiving of constitutions in the predominant liberal mode has broadly favoured hegemonic interests.

It is concluded that counterhegemonic forms of constitutional discourse cannot be effected within, but only by unthinking, the dominant liberal legalist paradigm, in a manner that takes seriously all exercises of political power.

About the Author

Gavin W Anderson is Senior Lecturer in the School of Law, University of Glasgow.

Reviews

The evidence Anderson marshals in favour of legal pluralism over legal liberalism is compelling.
Caroline Libman Mandell
University of Toronto Law Journal
Vol. 56 No. 3, Summer 06



...an excellent piece of scholarship and deserves praise. It tackles head-on a theme of enormous moment—the consequences of globalisation for constitutional law—and it is anything but parochial, developing clear lines of argument
on the basis of wide-ranging, interdisciplinary research.
Thomas Poole
Public Law
Autumn 2007



… a convincing critique…
Hans Lindahl
Social and Legal Studies
Volume 16(1)


Anderson successfully meets the challenge of discussing a potentially dry subject...by making his arguments mercifully brief, yet surprisingly clear
Julie A. Thomas
Law & Politics Book Review, Vol 16, No 2
Feb 2006
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