Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt on the limits of constitutional law /
translation, introduction and notes by Lars Vinx
1411
ix, 279 pages ;
24 cm
Cambridge studies in constitutional law
Includes bibliographical references (pages 266-273) and index
1. Kelsen on the nature and development of constitutional adjudication -- 2. The guardian of the constitution : Schmitt's argument against constitutional review -- 3. The guardian of the constitution : Schmitt on the pluralism and the president as the guardian of the constitution -- 4. Who ought to be the guardian of the constitution? : Kelsen's reply to Schmitt -- 5. Prussia contra Reich : Schmitt's closing statement in Leipzig -- 6. Kelsen on the judgment of the Staatsgerichtshof of 25 of October 1932
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"This volume provides the first English translation of Hans Kelsen's and Carl Schmitt's influential Weimar-era debate on constitutional guardianship and the legitimacy of constitutional review. It includes Kelsen's seminal piece, 'The Nature and Development of Constitutional Adjudication', as well as key extracts from the 'Guardian of the Constitution' which present Schmitt's argument against constitutional review. Also included are Kelsen's review of Schmitt's 'Guardian of the Constitution', as well as some further material by Kelsen and Schmitt on presidential dictatorship under Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution. These texts show Kelsen and Schmitt responding to one another, in the context of a debate focused on a concrete constitutional crisis, thus allowing the reader to assess the plausibility of Kelsen's and Schmitt's legal and constitutional theories"--