Social difference and constitutionalism in Pan-Asia / edited by Susan H. Williams, Indiana University, Maurer School of Law.
2014
KNC524 .S63 2014 (Map It)
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Details
Title
Social difference and constitutionalism in Pan-Asia / edited by Susan H. Williams, Indiana University, Maurer School of Law.
Published
New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Call Number
KNC524 .S63 2014
ISBN
9781107036277 (hardback)
1107036275 (hardback)
1107036275 (hardback)
Description
xii, 364 pages ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)853313638
Summary
"One of the most vexing problems in the theory and practice of politics is the issue of difference. How do we build a just and stable polity in the face of identity differences that have historically been the basis for inequality, injustice, and violence? Such differences can take a variety of forms, including religious difference, race and ethnicity, language difference, urban/rural tensions, and gender. In many countries, divisions such as these are the fault lines that threaten the stability of the social and legal order. This book addresses the role of constitutions and constitutionalism in dealing with the challenge of difference. In the spring of 2011, a conference held at Indiana University brought together a distinguished group of lawyers, political scientists, historians, religious studies scholars, and area studies experts to consider how constitutions and constitutionalism address issues of difference across a wide swath of the world we called "Pan-Asia." Pan-Asia runs from the Middle East, through Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, and into Oceania. This is a meta-region across which ideas and influences have traveled for centuries. It is also an area of the world that includes every type of difference in abundant supply. Pan-Asia, therefore, provides a wonderful laboratory for examining the role of constitutions in addressing difference. The existing literatures, while rich in other ways, do not speak directly to this issue of constitutions as a mechanism for addressing difference. There is a vast political theory literature on the relationship between democracy and difference"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Added Author
Table of Contents
List of Contributors
ix
Introduction: Constitutions and Difference: Ideology and Institutions / Susan H. Williams
1
pt. I
LANGUAGE
1.
Negotiating Differences: India's Language Policy / Benjamin B. Cohen
27
2.
Constitution and Language in Post-Independence Central Asia / William Fierman
53
pt. II
URBAN/RURAL
3.
Dreams of Redemption: Localist Strategies of Political Reform in the Philippines / Paul D. Hutchcroft
75
4.
Constitutional Rights and Dialogic Process in Socialist Vietnam: Protecting Rural-to-Urban Migrants' Rights without a Constitutional Court / Huong Thi Nguyen
109
pt. III
ETHNICITY AND RACE
5.
Asymmetrical Federalism in Burma / David C. Williams
137
6.
Hu Wants Something New: Discourse and the Deep Structure of Minzu Policies in China / Gardner Bovingdon
165
pt. IV
RELIGION
7.
Sectarian Visions of the Iraqi State: Irreconcilable Differences? / Feisal Amin Rasoul al-Istrabadi
195
8.
Constitutionalism and Religious Difference in Israel (and a Brief Passage to Malaysia) / Ran Hirschl
230
pt. V
GENDER AND SEXUALITY
9.
Australia's Gendered Constitutional History and Future / Christabel Richards-Neville
261
10.
Islamic Feminism(s): Promoting Gender Egalitarianism and Challenging Constitutional Constraints / Asma Afsaruddin
292
11.
India, Nepal, and Pakistan: A Unique South Asian Constitutional Discourse on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity / Steve Sanders
316
Index
349