The identity of the constitutional subject: selfhood, citizenship, culture, and community/ Michel Rosenfeld
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section | 342 ROS/I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P28796 |
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342 JAI/P Principles of Administrative Law | 342 KJA/C Constitutionalism in the global realm: a sociological approach/ | 342 ROS/C Comparative administrative law/ | 342 ROS/I The identity of the constitutional subject: selfhood, citizenship, culture, and community/ | 342 SAT/A Administrative Law | 342 SAT/A Administrative law/ | 342 SAT/A Administrative Law |
Part 1: Why Constitutional Identity and for Whom? 1. The Constitutional Subject: Singular, Plural or Universal? 2. The Constitutional Subject and the Clash of Self and Other: On the Uses of Negation, Metaphor and Metonymy Part 2: Producing Constitutional Identity 3. Reinventing Tradition through Constitutional Interpretation: The Case of Unremunerated Rights in the United States 4. Recasting and Reorienting Identity through Constitution-Making: The Pivotal Case of Spain's 1978 Constitution Part 3: Constitutional Identity as Bridge Between Self and Other: Binding Together Citizenship, History and Society 5. Constitutional Models: Shaping, Nurturing and Guiding the Constitutional Subject 6. Models of Constitution Making 7. The Constitutional Subject and Clashing Visions of Citizenship: Can We be Beyond what We are Not? 8. Can the Constitutional Subject go Global? Imagining a Convergence of the Universal, the Particular and the Singular
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