Review of Central and East European Law, volume 49, issue 2-4, pages 298-323

Displacing the Constitution: Modernity, Sovereignty and Crisis in Interwar Romania

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-11-01
scimago Q2
SJR0.118
CiteScore0.9
Impact factor0.5
ISSN09259880, 15730352
Abstract

By a legal historical analysis of the context of the interwar period, it seeks to uncover the ideological infrastructure subjacent to the constitutional project of the interwar period, placing Romanian constitutional thought and practice in a proper international context. By tracing the changes within the practice of emergency and the shifting status of sovereign power within the years following the institution of the Constitution of 1923, it moves towards examining the affirmation of authoritarian features of unbound state power in the Constitution of 1938, the first dictatorial constitution in Romanian modernity.

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