Description
Offering a compact but comprehensive constitutional history, Venter investigates the ways in which the standard vocabulary does not fit comfortably in many contemporary constitutional orders, as well as examining how its cogency is increasingly being questioned. Chapters contextualize comparative constitutional methods to demonstrate how the language choices made by comparatists are shaped by their own perspectives, arguing that careful explanation of the meanings attached to constitutional terms is imperative in order to be persuasive or even understood.
Tackling the foundational elements of the field, this book will be a critical read for constitutional scholars across the globe. It will also be of interest to high-level practitioners of constitutional law and political scientists for its investigation of terminology that is crucial to their work.
About the Author
Francois Venter, Extraordinary Professor, Faculty of Law, North-West University, South Africa
Reviews
'This book taps into deeper layers in comparative constitutional law. Francois Venter starts from the lingual character of all law to examine seemingly similar terms in different political systems and their relationship to foundational insights, political conditions and diverging legal traditions. Equipped with such comparative findings, researchers and practitioners of constitutional law will better understand contested concepts in their own system.' -- Ernst Hirsch Ballin, Tilburg Law School, the Netherlands
Book Information
ISBN 9781800882577
Author Francois Venter
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd