Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Law Constitutional

Constitutional Design for Divided Societies

Integration or Accommodation?

edited by Sujit Choudhry

Publisher
Oxford University Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2008
Category
Constitutional
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780199535415
    Publish Date
    Apr 2008
    List Price
    $185.00

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

How should constitutional design respond to the opportunities and challenges raised by ethnic, linguistic, religious, and cultural differences, and do so in ways that promote democracy, social justice, peace and stability? This is one of the most difficult questions facing societies in the world today.

There are two schools of thought on how to answer this question. Under the heading of "accommodation", some have argued for the need to recognize, institutionalize and empower differences. There are a range of constitutional instruments available to achieve this goal, such as multinational federalism and administrative decentralization, legal pluralism (e.g. religious personal law), other forms of non-territorial minority rights (e.g. minority language and religious education rights), consociationalism, affirmative action, legislative quotas, etc. But others have countered that such practices may entrench, perpetuate and exacerbate the very divisions they are designed to manage. They propose a range of alternative strategies that fall under the rubric of "integration" that will blur, transcend and cross-cut differences. Such strategies include bills of rights enshrining universal human rights enforced by judicial review, policies of disestablishment (religious and ethnocultural), federalism and electoral systems designed specifically to include members of different groups within the same political unit and to disperse members of the same group across different units, are some examples.

In this volume, leading scholars of constitutional law, comparative politics and political theory address the debate at a conceptual level, as well as through numerous country case-studies, through an interdisciplinary lens, but with a legal and institutional focus.

About the author

Sujit Choudhry is an associate professor in the Faculty of Law and the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto.

Sujit Choudhry's profile page