2.1K
Publications
102.7K
Citations
2.1K
Authors
752
Institutions
Global Constitutionalism and Judicialization
1994 - 2000
During 1994–2000, comparative constitutional law was characterized by the judicialization of politics, as courts across diverse contexts reshaped policy, rights, and governance beyond the legislature. A strong focus emerged on constitutional reform and amendment design, with empirical patterns and institutional constraints shaping reform feasibility across democracies. Methodological practice matured, as cross-jurisdictional reasoning and governance analyses became central, alongside the rise of world-level constitutionalism that traced global diffusion of norms and cross-border governance frameworks.
• Judicialization and the centrality of courts in constitutional change across national contexts, highlighting how courts reshape policy, rights, and governance beyond legislatures [1], [4], [7], [11].
• Constitutional reform, amendment design, and reform feasibility emerge as central research concerns, with empirical patterns and institutional constraints shaping reform outcomes across democracies [3], [5], [17], [13].
• Comparative law methodology and theory as a core practice, emphasizing how cross-jurisdictional reasoning, harmonization, and governance analyses drive the field [16], [18], [19], [20], [15].
• World-level constitutionalism and cross-border governance emphasize global tendencies in constitutional norms, regional integration effects, and international governance frameworks [9], [14], [19], [1].
• Constitutional theory, sovereignty, and economic order intersect in debates about Jewish-democratic state models, early American sovereignty, and neoliberal constitutional order [6], [2], [13].
Global Judicialization of Constitutionalism
2001 - 2007
Global Multilevel Constitutionalism
2008 - 2014
Constitutional Pluralism and Reform
2015 - 2021