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Revolutionary Constitutions: Charismatic Leadership and the Rule of Law

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A robust defense of democratic populism by one of America’s most renowned and controversial constitutional scholars—the award-winning author of We the People.

Populism is a threat to the democratic world, fuel for demagogues and reactionary crowds—or so its critics would have us believe. But in his award-winning trilogy We the People, Bruce Ackerman showed that Americans have repeatedly rejected this view. Now he draws on a quarter century of scholarship in this essential and surprising inquiry into the origins, successes, and threats to revolutionary constitutionalism around the world. He takes us to India, South Africa, Italy, France, Poland, Burma, Israel, and Iran and provides a blow-by-blow account of the tribulations that confronted popular movements in their insurgent campaigns for constitutional democracy. Despite their many differences, populist leaders such as Nehru, Mandela, and de Gaulle encountered similar dilemmas at critical turning points, and each managed something overlooked but essential. Rather than deploy their charismatic leadership to retain power, they instead used it to confer legitimacy to the citizens and institutions of constitutional democracy.

Ackerman returns to the United States in his last chapter to provide new insights into the Founders’ acts of constitutional statesmanship as they met very similar challenges to those confronting populist leaders today. In the age of Trump, the democratic system of checks and balances will not survive unless ordinary citizens rally to its defense. Revolutionary Constitutions shows how activists can learn from their predecessors’ successes and profit from their mistakes, and sets up Ackerman’s next volume, which will address how elites and insiders co-opt and destroy the momentum of revolutionary movements.

Author: Ackerman Bruce
Publisher: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 432
ISBN: 9780674970687
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019
  • Introduction: Pathways
  • I. Constitutional Revolutions
    • 1. Constitutionalizing Revolution?
    • 2. Movement-Party Constitutionalism: India
    • 3. Struggling for Supremacy: South Africa
    • 4. From the French Resistance to the Fourth Republic
    • 5. Constitutional Revolution in Italy
    • 6. A Progress Report?
  • II. Elaborations
    • 7. De Gaulle’s Republic: The Outsider Returns
    • 8. Reconstructing the Fifth Republic
    • 9. Solidarity’s Triumph in Poland
    • 10. Solidarity’s Collapse: The Perils of Presidentialism
    • 11. The Race against Time: Burma and Israel
    • 12. Constitutionalizing Charisma in Iran
    • 13. American Exceptionalism?
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index

Bruce Ackerman is Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science at Yale University and the award-winning author of eighteen books, including Social Justice in the Liberal State and his multivolume constitutional history We the People. His book The Stakeholder Society (written with Anne Alstott) served as a basis for Tony Blair’s introduction of child investment accounts in the United Kingdom. He contributes frequently to the New York Times, Washington Post, and Los Angeles Times. Ackerman is a member of the American Law Institute and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the recipient of the American Philosophical Society’s Henry M. Phillips Prize for lifetime achievement in jurisprudence.

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