ISSN: 1474-2640, EISSN: 1474-2659
Published in association with the New York University School of Law, I•CON is dedicated to advancing the study of international and comparative constitutional law in the broadest sense of the terms.
I•CON recognizes that the boundaries between the disciplines of “constitutional law”, “administrative law”, “international law” and their comparative variants have become increasingly porous. So too, there is no longer a distinct divide between law and political science. I•CON scholarship reflects and values this intellectual cross-fertilization.
I•CON‘s interests include not only fields such as Administrative Law, Global Constitutional Law and Global Administrative Law, but also scholarship that reflects both legal reality and academic perception; scholarship which, in dealing with the challenges of public life and governance, combines elements from all of these fields with a good measure of political theory and social science.
Featuring scholarly articles by international and constitutional legal scholars, judges, and people from related fields, such as economics, philosophy and political science, I•CON offers critical analysis of current issues, debates and global trends that carry constitutional implications.
Editorial
Guest editorial: Liberal constitutionalism and postcolonialism in the South and beyond: On liberalism as an open source and the insights of decolonial critiques
Editorial Reflection
Poland and Hungary’s EU membership: On not confronting authoritarian governments
Gráinne De Búrca
Afterword: Karen J. Alter and Her Critics
The Vedanta challenge to multilateralism: Piercing the boundaries of the global legal order—Afterword to the Foreword by Karen Alter
Doreen Lustig
The fatigue of multilateralism: A new hope for international law—Afterword to the Foreword by Karen Alter
Sergio Puig
Capitalism, international law, race, and China’s rise: Afterword to the Foreword by Karen Alter
Gregory Shaffer
Global capitalism and law, and where to find them: Afterword to the Foreword by Karen Alter
Ntina Tzouvala
In the Möbius strip of global economic law: Afterword to the Foreword by Karen Alter
Antoine Vauchez
How to change the operating system of global capitalism: A rejoinder
Karen J Alter
Articles
Indirect elections as a constitutional device of epistocracy
Udit Bhatia
Judicial avoidance at the European Court of Human Rights: Institutional authority, the procedural turn, and docket control
Miles Jackson
Small-c constitutional rights
Adam Chilton, Mila Versteeg
Global health governance and the principle of subsidiarity: In defense of a robust decentralization approach
Thana C de Campos-Rudinsky, Mariana Canales
Crown-Presidentialism
William Partlett
Constitutional civil–military dynamics in Southeast Asia
Marcus Teo
Symposium: Football Feminism
Football feminism: Global governance perspectives
Michele Krech, Joseph H H Weiler
Taking feminism beyond the state: FIFA as a transnational battleground for feminist legal critique
Antoine Duval
Elements for FIFA’s feminist transformation: The case for indicators on football and women’s rights
Daniela Heerdt, Nadia Bernaz
The gender pay gap: How FIFA dropped the ball
Claire Poppelwell-Scevak
Rights-based constitutionalism and gender justice in Colombian women’s soccer
María Ximena Dávila, Nina Chaparro, Nelson Camilo Sánchez
A view from the top: An examination of postfeminist sensibilities in women leaders’ constructions of success and responses to gender inequality in English football
Amée Bryan
Critical Review of Governance
Constitutional amendment and public will formation: Deliberative mini-publics as a tool for consensus democracy
Oran Doyle, Rachael Walsh
Critical Review of Jurisprudence
What constitutes compliance? Legislative responses to Constitutional Court decisions in Indonesia
Simon Butt, Prayekti Murharjanti
Reinforcing the binary and disciplining the subject: The constitutional right to gender recognition in the Italian case law
Stefano Osella
I•CON: Debate!
Entangled legalities in the postnational space
Nico Krisch
Dystopian legalities: A reply to Nico Krisch
Jan Klabbers
Navigating law’s complexities: Concepts for postnational law—A reply to Nico Krisch
Sanne Taekema
Book Reviews
Joelle Grogan, Review of Miguel Poiares Maduro and Paul W. Kahn, eds., Democracy in Times of Pandemic: Different Futures Imagined
Joelle Grogan
Maciej Krogel, Review of Camila Vergara, Systemic Corruption: Constitutional Ideas for an Anti-Oligarchic Republic
Maciej Krogel
Davide Paris, Review of Giacomo Delledonne, Costituzione e legge elettorale: Un percorso comparatistico nello Stato costituzionale europeo [Constitution and Electoral Law: A Comparative Journey in the European Constitutional State]
Davide Paris
Dinesha Samararatne, Review of Philipp Dann, Michael Riegner, and Maxim Bonnemann, eds., The Global South and Comparative Constitutional Law
Dinesha Samararatne
Esta entrada fue modificada por última vez en 14/12/2022 12:23
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