The Constitution as Treaty

The International Legal Constructionalist Approach to the US Constitution

Francisco Forrest Martin author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:24th Sep '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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The Constitution as Treaty cover

This book examines how the US Constitution acts as an international treaty in the federal courts.

This book examines the US Constitution on the basis that it acts as an international treaty, thus making the federal courts, in essence, international courts. The Constitution as Treaty demonstrates that the federal courts' authority to review state and federal law is based on international law.The Constitution as Treaty transforms the conceptualization of US constitutional law by exploring the interpretive implications of viewing the US Constitution as a treaty. It argues that federal courts constitute an international tribunal system, and, as such, their jurisdiction is governed by international law enabling them to exercise judicial review authority and undercutting much of the judicial activist critique. The Constitution as Treaty continues with an examination of what is international law and its major interpretive principles in order to set the stage for examining how different sources and principles of international law are intrinsically integrated into US constitutional law and, thereby, are available to federal courts for deciding cases. It addresses the Charming Betsy Rule, the non-self-execution doctrine, the last-in-time rule, and the proper use of customary international law and other international law sources not mentioned in Article III. The Constitution as Treaty concludes that federal courts generally must construe the United States' international legal obligations liberally.

ISBN: 9780521881937

Dimensions: 235mm x 159mm x 20mm

Weight: 446g

230 pages