Verfassungsblog (Jul 2024)

Never Again. And Not Quite.

  • Kim Lane Scheppele

DOI
https://doi.org/10.59704/ee4ca88e7919fafa
Journal volume & issue
no. 2366-7044

Abstract

Read online

Those who build new public law act with the past hovering over their shoulders. Rejecting regimes of horror explains much of the content of new constitutions. Aversive constitutionalism – in which constitutionalists overtly steer away from a country’s appalling pasts – guides how they understand these new texts. On balance, even among those who disagree over precisely how the past is memorialized as “never again” in new constitutions, evidence shows that the horrors of the past influence public law in the present much more than do the dreams of some ideal future.

Keywords