Making we the people :: democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea /
"What does it mean to say that it is 'we the people' who 'ordain and establish' a constitution? Who are those sovereign people, and how can they do so? Interweaving history and theory, constitutional scholar Chaihark Hahm and political theorist Sung Ho Kim attempt to answer...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY :
Cambridge University Press,
2015.
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Schriftenreihe: | Comparative constitutional law and policy.
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | "What does it mean to say that it is 'we the people' who 'ordain and establish' a constitution? Who are those sovereign people, and how can they do so? Interweaving history and theory, constitutional scholar Chaihark Hahm and political theorist Sung Ho Kim attempt to answer these perennial questions by revisiting the constitutional politics of postwar Japan and Korea. Together, these experiences demonstrate the infeasibility of the conventional assumption that there is a clearly bounded sovereign 'people' prior to constitution-making which may stand apart from both outside influence and troubled historical legacies. The authors argue that 'we the people' only emerges through a deeply transformative politics of constitutional founding and, as such, a democratic constitution and its putative author are mutually constitutive. Highly original and genuinely multidisciplinary, this book will be of interest to scholars of comparative constitutionalism as well as observers of ongoing constitutional debates in Japan and Korea"-- |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource |
ISBN: | 9781139088480 1139088483 9781316429068 1316429067 |
Internformat
MARC
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Making we the people : |b democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / |c Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei University, Seoul ; Sung Ho Kim, Yonsei University, Seoul. |
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY : |b Cambridge University Press, |c 2015. | |
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520 | |a "What does it mean to say that it is 'we the people' who 'ordain and establish' a constitution? Who are those sovereign people, and how can they do so? Interweaving history and theory, constitutional scholar Chaihark Hahm and political theorist Sung Ho Kim attempt to answer these perennial questions by revisiting the constitutional politics of postwar Japan and Korea. Together, these experiences demonstrate the infeasibility of the conventional assumption that there is a clearly bounded sovereign 'people' prior to constitution-making which may stand apart from both outside influence and troubled historical legacies. The authors argue that 'we the people' only emerges through a deeply transformative politics of constitutional founding and, as such, a democratic constitution and its putative author are mutually constitutive. Highly original and genuinely multidisciplinary, this book will be of interest to scholars of comparative constitutionalism as well as observers of ongoing constitutional debates in Japan and Korea"-- |c Provided by publisher | ||
505 | 0 | |a Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Epigraph; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 The Unbearable Lightness of the People; Charisma and Its Discontents; External Others: "Autonomy Syndrome"; A Right Not to Be Second-Guessed?; A Republic If You Can Make It; The Outsider Who Wouldn't Quit; Past Legacies: "Tabula Rasa Syndrome"; God Is Dead, Long Live the People!; Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften: The People Without Qualities; Many Lives of the Past; People's Boundaries: "We the People" Unbounded; Free to Choose Who We Are? | |
505 | 8 | |a Making People Out of NecessityFacio ergo sum: We the People Make Therefore We Are the People; Constitutive Constitutional Politics; Time, Space, and the People Bounded; Popular Sovereignty, Constitutional Founding, and People-Making; 2 War and Peace; Overbearing Outsiders; Japan's Farewell to Arms; Bootstrapping Peace: MacArthur as Foreign Lawgiver; Swallowing Peace: Japanese Government's Acquiescence; Manipulating Peace: "San Francisco System" and the Yoshida Doctrine; Embracing Peace: "1955 System" and the Peaceable People; Korea's Tale of Two Cities. | |
505 | 8 | |a Idealism Meets Realism: Economy Chapter and Vested PropertiesPreemption: Regime Legitimacy and Land Reform; Realignment: Free Enterprise and Regional Integration; Present at the Creation; 3 The Ghost of Empire Past; Unmasterable Pasts; The Japanese Emperor's New Clothes; The People's Emperor between Past and Future; A Paper Revolution by Necessity; The King Who Would Be People; Symbol Emperor and Useable Pasts; The Once and Future Republic of Korea; Leveling the Constitutional Ground; Effacing the "Double Tyranny"; Judiciary and Legal Continuity; Power-Sharing and Transitional Justice. | |
505 | 8 | |a Revolutions and Restorations4 A Room of One's Own; Shifting Boundaries; Seeing Like an Empire; The Origins of the Household Registration System; Registering Taiwanese as Japanese Subjects; Integrating and Differentiating Koreans Within the Empire; To Live and Die as the Emperor's Equal Subjects; Dismembering the Japanese Empire; Predetermining the Human Boundary through Election Law; Negotiating the People and Its Boundary through the Constitution; Post-Constitutional Settlement of the Human Boundary; Dividing the Korean Peninsula; Separating Peoples by Vesting Properties. | |
505 | 8 | |a Draft Constitutions and the Division at the 38th ParallelUnited Nations and Election Laws; The Birth of the Constituent People and the Household Registration System; Impositions, Legacies, and "We the People"; Conclusion; Note on Romanization and Sources; Bibliography; Glossary; Index. | |
650 | 0 | |a Constitutional history |z Japan. | |
650 | 0 | |a Constitutional history |z Korea (South) | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
DE-BY-FWS_katkey | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn932097480 |
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Ham, Chae-hak |
author2 | Kim, Sung Ho, 1966 November 9- |
author2_role | |
author2_variant | s h k sh shk |
author_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr2001003974 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2003110046 |
author_facet | Ham, Chae-hak Kim, Sung Ho, 1966 November 9- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Ham, Chae-hak |
author_variant | c h h chh |
building | Verbundindex |
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callnumber-first | K - Law |
callnumber-label | KNC527 |
callnumber-raw | KNC527 .H358 2015 |
callnumber-search | KNC527 .H358 2015 |
callnumber-sort | KNC 3527 H358 42015 |
collection | ZDB-4-EBA |
contents | Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Epigraph; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 The Unbearable Lightness of the People; Charisma and Its Discontents; External Others: "Autonomy Syndrome"; A Right Not to Be Second-Guessed?; A Republic If You Can Make It; The Outsider Who Wouldn't Quit; Past Legacies: "Tabula Rasa Syndrome"; God Is Dead, Long Live the People!; Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften: The People Without Qualities; Many Lives of the Past; People's Boundaries: "We the People" Unbounded; Free to Choose Who We Are? Making People Out of NecessityFacio ergo sum: We the People Make Therefore We Are the People; Constitutive Constitutional Politics; Time, Space, and the People Bounded; Popular Sovereignty, Constitutional Founding, and People-Making; 2 War and Peace; Overbearing Outsiders; Japan's Farewell to Arms; Bootstrapping Peace: MacArthur as Foreign Lawgiver; Swallowing Peace: Japanese Government's Acquiescence; Manipulating Peace: "San Francisco System" and the Yoshida Doctrine; Embracing Peace: "1955 System" and the Peaceable People; Korea's Tale of Two Cities. Idealism Meets Realism: Economy Chapter and Vested PropertiesPreemption: Regime Legitimacy and Land Reform; Realignment: Free Enterprise and Regional Integration; Present at the Creation; 3 The Ghost of Empire Past; Unmasterable Pasts; The Japanese Emperor's New Clothes; The People's Emperor between Past and Future; A Paper Revolution by Necessity; The King Who Would Be People; Symbol Emperor and Useable Pasts; The Once and Future Republic of Korea; Leveling the Constitutional Ground; Effacing the "Double Tyranny"; Judiciary and Legal Continuity; Power-Sharing and Transitional Justice. Revolutions and Restorations4 A Room of One's Own; Shifting Boundaries; Seeing Like an Empire; The Origins of the Household Registration System; Registering Taiwanese as Japanese Subjects; Integrating and Differentiating Koreans Within the Empire; To Live and Die as the Emperor's Equal Subjects; Dismembering the Japanese Empire; Predetermining the Human Boundary through Election Law; Negotiating the People and Its Boundary through the Constitution; Post-Constitutional Settlement of the Human Boundary; Dividing the Korean Peninsula; Separating Peoples by Vesting Properties. Draft Constitutions and the Division at the 38th ParallelUnited Nations and Election Laws; The Birth of the Constituent People and the Household Registration System; Impositions, Legacies, and "We the People"; Conclusion; Note on Romanization and Sources; Bibliography; Glossary; Index. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)932097480 |
dewey-full | 342.519502/9 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 342 - Constitutional and administrative law |
dewey-raw | 342.519502/9 |
dewey-search | 342.519502/9 |
dewey-sort | 3342.519502 19 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
format | Electronic eBook |
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geographic | Japan fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJkT7GyCmyjxytDfqk6Yfq Korea (South) fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39QbtfRg3kwbTgW8wMXD4yWrY |
geographic_facet | Japan Korea (South) |
id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn932097480 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:26:56Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781139088480 1139088483 9781316429068 1316429067 |
language | English |
oclc_num | 932097480 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA |
publishDate | 2015 |
publishDateSearch | 2015 |
publishDateSort | 2015 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press, |
record_format | marc |
series | Comparative constitutional law and policy. |
series2 | Comparative constitutional law and policy |
spelling | Ham, Chae-hak, author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr2001003974 Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei University, Seoul ; Sung Ho Kim, Yonsei University, Seoul. New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2015. 1 online resource text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Comparative constitutional law and policy "What does it mean to say that it is 'we the people' who 'ordain and establish' a constitution? Who are those sovereign people, and how can they do so? Interweaving history and theory, constitutional scholar Chaihark Hahm and political theorist Sung Ho Kim attempt to answer these perennial questions by revisiting the constitutional politics of postwar Japan and Korea. Together, these experiences demonstrate the infeasibility of the conventional assumption that there is a clearly bounded sovereign 'people' prior to constitution-making which may stand apart from both outside influence and troubled historical legacies. The authors argue that 'we the people' only emerges through a deeply transformative politics of constitutional founding and, as such, a democratic constitution and its putative author are mutually constitutive. Highly original and genuinely multidisciplinary, this book will be of interest to scholars of comparative constitutionalism as well as observers of ongoing constitutional debates in Japan and Korea"-- Provided by publisher Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Epigraph; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 The Unbearable Lightness of the People; Charisma and Its Discontents; External Others: "Autonomy Syndrome"; A Right Not to Be Second-Guessed?; A Republic If You Can Make It; The Outsider Who Wouldn't Quit; Past Legacies: "Tabula Rasa Syndrome"; God Is Dead, Long Live the People!; Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften: The People Without Qualities; Many Lives of the Past; People's Boundaries: "We the People" Unbounded; Free to Choose Who We Are? Making People Out of NecessityFacio ergo sum: We the People Make Therefore We Are the People; Constitutive Constitutional Politics; Time, Space, and the People Bounded; Popular Sovereignty, Constitutional Founding, and People-Making; 2 War and Peace; Overbearing Outsiders; Japan's Farewell to Arms; Bootstrapping Peace: MacArthur as Foreign Lawgiver; Swallowing Peace: Japanese Government's Acquiescence; Manipulating Peace: "San Francisco System" and the Yoshida Doctrine; Embracing Peace: "1955 System" and the Peaceable People; Korea's Tale of Two Cities. Idealism Meets Realism: Economy Chapter and Vested PropertiesPreemption: Regime Legitimacy and Land Reform; Realignment: Free Enterprise and Regional Integration; Present at the Creation; 3 The Ghost of Empire Past; Unmasterable Pasts; The Japanese Emperor's New Clothes; The People's Emperor between Past and Future; A Paper Revolution by Necessity; The King Who Would Be People; Symbol Emperor and Useable Pasts; The Once and Future Republic of Korea; Leveling the Constitutional Ground; Effacing the "Double Tyranny"; Judiciary and Legal Continuity; Power-Sharing and Transitional Justice. Revolutions and Restorations4 A Room of One's Own; Shifting Boundaries; Seeing Like an Empire; The Origins of the Household Registration System; Registering Taiwanese as Japanese Subjects; Integrating and Differentiating Koreans Within the Empire; To Live and Die as the Emperor's Equal Subjects; Dismembering the Japanese Empire; Predetermining the Human Boundary through Election Law; Negotiating the People and Its Boundary through the Constitution; Post-Constitutional Settlement of the Human Boundary; Dividing the Korean Peninsula; Separating Peoples by Vesting Properties. Draft Constitutions and the Division at the 38th ParallelUnited Nations and Election Laws; The Birth of the Constituent People and the Household Registration System; Impositions, Legacies, and "We the People"; Conclusion; Note on Romanization and Sources; Bibliography; Glossary; Index. Constitutional history Japan. Constitutional history Korea (South) Histoire constitutionnelle Japon. Histoire constitutionnelle Corée du Sud. LAW Constitutional. bisacsh LAW Public. bisacsh Constitutional history fast Japan fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJkT7GyCmyjxytDfqk6Yfq Korea (South) fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39QbtfRg3kwbTgW8wMXD4yWrY Kim, Sung Ho, 1966 November 9- https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjBPrXtQchYBjwbmKGTtmm http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2003110046 Print version: 9781107018822 110701882X (DLC) 2015020956 (OCoLC)910310278 Comparative constitutional law and policy. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2012051495 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1077363 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Ham, Chae-hak Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / Comparative constitutional law and policy. Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Epigraph; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 The Unbearable Lightness of the People; Charisma and Its Discontents; External Others: "Autonomy Syndrome"; A Right Not to Be Second-Guessed?; A Republic If You Can Make It; The Outsider Who Wouldn't Quit; Past Legacies: "Tabula Rasa Syndrome"; God Is Dead, Long Live the People!; Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften: The People Without Qualities; Many Lives of the Past; People's Boundaries: "We the People" Unbounded; Free to Choose Who We Are? Making People Out of NecessityFacio ergo sum: We the People Make Therefore We Are the People; Constitutive Constitutional Politics; Time, Space, and the People Bounded; Popular Sovereignty, Constitutional Founding, and People-Making; 2 War and Peace; Overbearing Outsiders; Japan's Farewell to Arms; Bootstrapping Peace: MacArthur as Foreign Lawgiver; Swallowing Peace: Japanese Government's Acquiescence; Manipulating Peace: "San Francisco System" and the Yoshida Doctrine; Embracing Peace: "1955 System" and the Peaceable People; Korea's Tale of Two Cities. Idealism Meets Realism: Economy Chapter and Vested PropertiesPreemption: Regime Legitimacy and Land Reform; Realignment: Free Enterprise and Regional Integration; Present at the Creation; 3 The Ghost of Empire Past; Unmasterable Pasts; The Japanese Emperor's New Clothes; The People's Emperor between Past and Future; A Paper Revolution by Necessity; The King Who Would Be People; Symbol Emperor and Useable Pasts; The Once and Future Republic of Korea; Leveling the Constitutional Ground; Effacing the "Double Tyranny"; Judiciary and Legal Continuity; Power-Sharing and Transitional Justice. Revolutions and Restorations4 A Room of One's Own; Shifting Boundaries; Seeing Like an Empire; The Origins of the Household Registration System; Registering Taiwanese as Japanese Subjects; Integrating and Differentiating Koreans Within the Empire; To Live and Die as the Emperor's Equal Subjects; Dismembering the Japanese Empire; Predetermining the Human Boundary through Election Law; Negotiating the People and Its Boundary through the Constitution; Post-Constitutional Settlement of the Human Boundary; Dividing the Korean Peninsula; Separating Peoples by Vesting Properties. Draft Constitutions and the Division at the 38th ParallelUnited Nations and Election Laws; The Birth of the Constituent People and the Household Registration System; Impositions, Legacies, and "We the People"; Conclusion; Note on Romanization and Sources; Bibliography; Glossary; Index. Constitutional history Japan. Constitutional history Korea (South) Histoire constitutionnelle Japon. Histoire constitutionnelle Corée du Sud. LAW Constitutional. bisacsh LAW Public. bisacsh Constitutional history fast |
title | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / |
title_auth | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / |
title_exact_search | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / |
title_full | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei University, Seoul ; Sung Ho Kim, Yonsei University, Seoul. |
title_fullStr | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei University, Seoul ; Sung Ho Kim, Yonsei University, Seoul. |
title_full_unstemmed | Making we the people : democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei University, Seoul ; Sung Ho Kim, Yonsei University, Seoul. |
title_short | Making we the people : |
title_sort | making we the people democratic constitutional founding in postwar japan and south korea |
title_sub | democratic constitutional founding in postwar Japan and South Korea / |
topic | Constitutional history Japan. Constitutional history Korea (South) Histoire constitutionnelle Japon. Histoire constitutionnelle Corée du Sud. LAW Constitutional. bisacsh LAW Public. bisacsh Constitutional history fast |
topic_facet | Constitutional history Japan. Constitutional history Korea (South) Histoire constitutionnelle Japon. Histoire constitutionnelle Corée du Sud. LAW Constitutional. LAW Public. Constitutional history Japan Korea (South) |
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