Constitutional Foundings in Northeast Asia
Kevin YL Tan editor Michael Ng editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:29th Jun '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Considers the drafting, nature, core values and roles of the modern constitutions during the founding of the eight modern states in Northeast Asia: China, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Mongolia.
This new book in the Constitutionalism in Asia series considers the idea of origins, and of change and continuity in terms of ‘constitution-making’, which is an on-going process in the Northeast Asian states.
The book examines the drafting, nature, core values, and roles of the first modern constitutions during the founding of the 8 modern states/territories in Northeast Asia: China (1949), Taiwan (1947), Hong Kong SAR (1997), Macau SAR (1999), Japan (1889), North Korea (1948 and 1972), South Korea (1948), and Mongolia (1924).
The collection provides:
- an exploratory description of the process and substantive inputs in the making of the first constitutions of these nations/territories;
- analysis of the internal and external (including intra-regional) forces surrounding the making of these constitutions; and
- theoretical construction of models to conceptualise the nature and role of the first constitutions (including constituent documents) in the founding of the modern nation-states/territories and their subsequent impact on state-building in the region.
As the first book to examine all the first constitutions of Northeast Asia, this volume fills a long-empty gap in comparative and Asian studies literature with quality and style. * Australian Journal of Asian Law *
ISBN: 9781509956746
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
304 pages