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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter February 13, 2023

What are We Talking About When We Talk About “Mixed Constitutions”? Towards a Typology of Constitutional Mixture

  • Yaniv Roznai EMAIL logo

Abstract

This article argues that constitutional mixture should be regarded as an inherent, inevitable feature of constitutions, and to some degree all constitutions are mixed. Thus, “mixed constitutions” should not be regarded as a distinct category of constitutions. Instead of asking whether a constitution is mixed, it might therefore be more useful to ask in which characteristics and to what extent a constitution is mixed. To demonstrate this, the article provides a preliminary typology of constitutional mixture considering the form or system of government; the nature or character of government; the religious or secular identity; the flexibility or rigidity of the constitution; and its model of judicial enforcement—judicial or parliamentary supremacy. Examining these constitutional features, allows to shed light on the three different dimensions of “constitutional mixture”: First, the various features of the constitutional order do not function in a binary yes-or-no manner but appear and move along a spectrum. Second, the various features of the constitution change with time. Third, the various features of the constitutional text may be in tension with the features of the society.


Corresponding author: Yaniv Roznai, Associate Professor, Harry Radzyner Law School, Reichman University (IDC Herzliya), Herzliya, Israel, E-mail:

Acknowledgments

I wish to thank the participants of the College of Law & Business “Mixed Constitutions and Human Rights Workshop” (May 2–4, 2021), and especially, Mark Tushnet; Tom Ginsburg; Gila Stopler; Xisca Pou Giménez; Cora Chan; the commentator of the article, Yvonne Tew; and the external reviewer for their extremely useful comments and remarks.

Published Online: 2023-02-13
Published in Print: 2022-11-25

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