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    Constitutional fragments : societal constitutionalism and globalization / Gunther Teubner ; translated by Gareth Norbury.

    • Title:Constitutional fragments : societal constitutionalism and globalization / Gunther Teubner ; translated by Gareth Norbury.
    •    
    • Author/Creator:Teubner, Gunther.
    • Other Contributors/Collections:Norbury, Gareth.
    • Published/Created:Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2012.
    • Holdings

       
    • Library of Congress Subjects:Constitutional law.
      Administrative law.
      International business enterprises--Law and legislation.
      Corporate governance.
      Law and globalization.
    • Description:x, 213 p. ; 24 cm.
    • Series:Oxford constitutional theory.
    • Notes:Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
    • ISBN:9780199644674 (hbk.)
      0199644675 (hbk.)
    • Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. New Constitutional Question
      I. Crisis in Modern Constitutionalism?
      1. Nation-state constitution versus global constitution
      2. Impulses from constitutional sociology
      II. False Premises
      1. Societal constitutionalism as a genuine problem of globalization?
      2. Constitutional emptiness of the transnational?
      3. Reducing transnational governance to political processes?
      4. Reducing the third-party effects of fundamental rights to the states' duties of care?
      5. unitary, cosmopolitan global constitution?
      2. Sectorial Constitutions in the Nation State
      I. Societal Institutions under Liberal Constitutionalism
      1. Constitution-free spheres of individual freedom
      2. Autonomous societal orders
      II. Totalitarian Societal Constitutions
      III. Sub-constitutions in the Welfare State
      1. Historical lessons
      2. Statist societal constitutionalism
      3. Politicization of social sectors
      IV. Economic Constitutionalism for the Whole Society
      1. Ordoliberal constitutionalism
      2. Constitutional economics
      V. Constitutional Pluralism
      1. Neo-corporatist arrangements
      2. Societal constitutionalism
      3. Transnational Constitutional Subjects: Regimes, Organizations, Networks
      I. Global Structures
      II. Social Constitutionalization by the States?
      1. UN Charter
      2. Soft law of the states
      3. International public law and global administrative law
      III. Independent Constitutions of Global Institutions
      1. Constitutional fragmentation
      2. Constitutions of international organizations
      3. Regime constitutions
      IV. Transnational Regimes as Constitutional Subjects?
      1. Pouvoir constituant/constitue
      2. Collective identity
      4. Transnational Constitutional Norms: Functions, Arenas, Processes, Structures
      I. Constitutional Functions: Constitutive/Limitative
      1. Self-foundation of social systems
      2. `Double movement' of global constitutionalism
      3. Self-constraint of growth pressures
      4. `Capillary constitutions'
      5. Devil and Beelzebub
      II. Constitutional Arenas: Internal Differentiation in Social Systems
      1. Spontaneous sphere
      2. Organized-professional sphere
      3. self-regulatory sphere of the communicative medium
      III. Constitutional Processes: Double Reflexivity
      1. Reflexivity of the social system
      2. Reflexivity of the legal system
      IV. Constitutional Structures: Hybrid Meta-codes
      1. Coding and meta-coding
      2. Hybridity
      V. Politics of Societal Constitutionalism
      1. La politique versus le politique
      2. In the shadow of politics
      3. Internal politics of social subsystems
      5. Transnational Fundamental Rights: Horizontal Effect
      I. Fundamental Rights Beyond the Nation State
      1. Extraterritorial effect of national constitutional rights?
      2. Global colere publique
      3. Regime-specific standards of fundamental rights
      II. Fundamental Rights Binding `Private' Transnational Actors
      1. Beyond state action
      2. Generalization: communicative media instead of general values
      3. Respecification in different social contexts
      III. Inclusionary Effect of Fundamental Rights: Right to Access
      IV. Exclusionary Effect of Fundamental Rights
      V. Anonymous Matrix
      VI. Justiciability?
      6. Inter-constitutional Collisions
      I. Lack of a Third-party Authority
      II. Inter-regime Conflicts
      1. Modifications of the traditional conflict of laws
      2. Normative networks
      III. Intercultural Conflicts
      1. Cultural polycentrism
      2. Re-entry of the `extrinsic' into the `intrinsic'
      3. Intercultural conflict norms
      IV. Guiding Principles in Various Constitutional Conflicts.
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