Rethinking human rights and global constitutionalism :
[Book]
from inclusion to belonging /
Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko.
New York, NY :
Cambridge University Press,
2017.
1 online resource
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Cover -- Half-title page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- A Context and Plan of Work -- B On Methodology -- 1 Agamben and Philosophical Archaeology -- 2 Deleuze and Guattari: Machinic Assemblage and How It Functions -- 3 Building Blocks, Paradigms: Time-Travel Machines? -- 1 Paradigms of Global Constitutionalism -- A Situating Global Constitutionalism -- B Theories of Constitutionalism: Questions, Gaps, Issues -- 1 Individuals within Global Constitutionalism
(4) Reading the Global with Bourdieu(a) Transnational Societal Constitutionalism -- (b) Postnational Pluralism -- c) Conclusions -- 3 Politics of International Constitutionalism -- a) Law over Politics in International Constitutionalism -- (1) Considering Democracy -- (2) The Active Subject and the Political -- (a) Schmitt: Friend and Enemy -- (b) Agamben: Whatever Singularity and Belonging -- (c) Prospects of Global Constitutionalism in Light of Visions of the Political -- b) Conclusions -- C Distilling Paradigms
2 Mechanisms and Modalities of Human Rights in Global ConstitutionalismA Introduction -- B State of the Art: Human Rights in International Constitutionalism -- C Constitutions and the Functioning of Rights: Domestic Experience -- 1 Methodological Remarks and the Functioning of Constitutions -- 2 Specifics of Fundamental Rights Functioning -- D Beyond the Domestic Constitutional Experience -- 1 Approaching the Functioning of Human Rights from a Sociological Perspective -- 2 How Human Rights Function within the Global Context: Three Possible Answers
A) Luhmann and Two Ways(1) Maintaining a Global Normative System -- (2) Disappearance of the Need for Law -- (3) Summary and Transition -- b) Thornhill and the Fusion of Law and Politics -- c) Teubner and Constitutionalisation without Politics -- 3 (Un)certainties of Human Rights Functioning -- E Conclusions -- 3 The Other of Human Rights and Global Constitutionalism -- A Before the Law: Controlling Power in Ancient Greece -- 1 From Community to Individual in Ancient Greece -- 2 From Ancient Greece to Contemporary International Law
A) The State of the Art: The Individual as an Equilibrium Pointb) From Active Inclusion to Confrontation of Modalities Exclusion -- c) Private Sponsorship of Refugees as a Confrontation of Modalities of Exclusion -- 2 States in Global Constitutionalism -- a) Overview of Current Debates in International Constitutionalism -- b) State Thinking as a Structuring Device -- (1) Bourdieuâ#x80;#x99;s Methodological Remarks -- (2) Constitution of the State -- (3) Characteristics of the State -- (a) Symbolic Violence/Power -- (b) Public/Official and Universal
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"Constitutionalism understood broadly is a concept that addresses emergence, restriction and legitimation of power and authority. Traditionally, concepts of constitution and constitutionalism developed from within particular communities, mostly states"--
MIL
1042147
Rethinking human rights and global constitutionalism.