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The Post-Soviet as Post-Colonial

A New Paradigm for Understanding Constitutional Dynamics in the Former Soviet Empire

Specificaties
Gebonden, 288 blz. | Engels
Edward Elgar Publishing | 1e druk, 2022
ISBN13: 9781802209433
Rubricering
Hoofdrubriek : Juridisch
Juridisch : Staatsrecht
Jongbloed : Staatsrecht algemeen
Edward Elgar Publishing 1e druk, 2022 9781802209433
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Samenvatting

This book takes a new approach to post-socialist constitutional change in Europe and Eurasia. It views these constitutions as the products of the collapse of Europe’s last empire, the Soviet Union. This book therefore seeks to understand these constitutions as more than just post-authoritarian texts, but also as post-colonial ones.

This post-colonial paradigm provides a new set of tools for understanding constitutional dynamics in key countries within the European Union as well as the former Soviet republics to the East. In particular, it helps explain democratic backsliding in Central Europe (such as Hungary and Poland), authoritarian resilience in many of the former Soviet republics (including Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan) as well as ongoing struggles about national identity in places like Ukraine and Moldova.

Partlett and Küpper’s application of the post-colonial paradigm to the former Soviet world contributes to our understanding of post-colonial constitutionalism. This insightful book therefore appeals to the comparative constitutional academic community as well as the broader academic community interested in post-colonialism. It will also be of interest to a general audience interested in better understanding the former socialist bloc countries.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9781802209433
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:gebonden
Aantal pagina's:288
Druk:1
Verschijningsdatum:24-5-2022
Hoofdrubriek:Staatsrecht

Inhoudsopgave

Preface

Introduction: understanding East European and Eurasian constitutions through the post-colonial lens

1. Post-colonialism and post-socialist constitutional change
2. Russian constitution-making: convergence or continued exceptionalism in the former imperial centre?
3. An unexpected independence: the constitutions of the states of the ‘inner empire’
4. Case studies from the inner empire
5. Factual decolonisation: the constitutions of the states of the ‘outer empire’
6. Case study from the outer empire

Conclusions: the shadows of the past and the overlaps between the post-authoritarian and the post-colonial

Bibliography
Index

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        The Post-Soviet as Post-Colonial